The Verge / Lauren Feiner
The Wall Street Journal / Ann M. Simmons
The New Yorker / Katy Waldman
Columbia Journalism Review / Maddy Crowell
Meidas gold: A Q&A with Brett Meiselas of MeidasTouch →“As we often joke on the show in various ways, if President Biden and Democrats started talking about ‘terminating’ the Constitution, praising January 6 insurrectionists as ‘warriors’ and ‘patriots,’ and told stories about either being electrocuted or eaten by sharks, we’d have no hesitation in calling that out with the same passion that we do Trump. But that’s not the political and cultural landscape in which we find ourselves.”
Local News Blues / Alice Dreger
The Verge / Jordan Pearson
What the RIAA lawsuits mean for AI and copyright →“Neither Suno nor Udio have made their training datasets public. And both firms are vague about the sources of their training data — though that’s par for the course in the AI industry. (OpenAI, for example, has
dodged questions about whether YouTube videos were used to train its Sora video model.)”
The Atlantic / Matteo Wong
OpenAI may not be able to keep its promise to media companies →“A good chatbot and a good web index, in other words, could be fundamentally at odds—media companies might be asking OpenAI to build a product that sacrifices ‘intelligence’ for fidelity. ‘What we want to do with the generation goes against that attribution-and-provenance part, so you have to make a choice,’ Chirag Shah, an AI and internet-search expert at the University of Washington, told me.” (See also: Andrew Deck’s
previous reporting on ChatGPT failing to credit Business Insider’s biggest scoops, even after parent company Axel Springer signed a licensing deal with OpenAI.)
Los Angeles Times / Laurel Rosenhall
The Journalist's Resource / Naseem S. Miller