Garbage Day / Ryan Broderick
Does anyone even want an AI search engine? →“The Browser Company’s new app lets you ask semantic questions to a chatbot, which then summarizes live internet results in a simulation of a conversation. Which is great, in theory, as long as you don’t have any concerns about whether what it’s saying is accurate, don’t care where that information is coming from or who wrote it, and don’t think through the long-term feasibility of a product like this even a little bit.”
Washington Post / George Will
Slate Magazine / Dan Kois
She was the most feared woman in publishing. What happened? →“A Times reporter elevated to the critic’s chair at 28, she often seemed to approach the job of book reviewing as a reportorial one: She took great notes, she assembled them smartly, and she moved on to the next story. [Michiko] Kakutani did seem to take seriously the reviewer’s role as consumer guide. ‘My job as a critic was to give honest evaluations of new books and to try to explain why I thought they were worth reading—or not,’ she said after she left the paper.”
The Hollywood Reporter / Lachlan Cartwright
Jeff Zucker is snapping up media properties at a frantic clip →“In a little over a year, he has invested in TV studio and motion picture company Media Res and news site Front Office Sports and just made an audacious bid to buy the U.K.’s Telegraph, provoking an outcry from journalists and politicians. On Feb. 17, Zucker’s firm bought powerhouse producer All3Media.”
ABC News / SYLVIA HUI and JILL LAWLESS
Dublin Inquirer / Sam Tranum
In Ireland, a local paper battles on →A new paywall hasn’t brought a flood of subscribers. “‘We get a lot of people subscribing for a month and coming back off,’ [managing director Emma Kennedy] says. ‘Which initially we were like, “Ah”, and then we’re like, no, if they’re willing to pay five euros to read one thing that’s fine.'”
Washington Post / Will Sommer
Press Gazette / Aisha Majid
U.S. print newspaper subscriptions continue to drop →“News Corp’s business-focused The Wall Street Journal (555,182) and The New York Times (267,639) remain the biggest dailies in the US, although their print circulations fell by 14% and 13% year-on-year respectively.”