Nieman Lab: The Daily Digest

Proof News is Julia Angwin’s attempt to bring the scientific method to investigative journalism

The cofounder of The Markup wants to expand beyond tech with her new publication. By Neel Dhanesha.
Sequencer launches as a writer-owned popular science magazine
What We’re Reading
TechCrunch / Amanda Silberling
Why is AI so bad at spelling? →
“If you ask text-to-image generators like DALL-E to create a menu for a Mexican restaurant, you might spot some appetizing items like ‘taao,’ ‘burto,’ and ‘enchida’ amid a sea of other gibberish.”
The New York Times / Michael M. Grynbaum and Mike Isaac
Condé Nast’s owners are set to reap a $1.4 billion windfall from Reddit →
“Reddit is a far cry from the meticulously curated guides to haute living in the Condé Nast stable. But its public offering will reward an early and prescient bet on the company by the Newhouses, who own roughly one-third of the outstanding shares.”
WIRED / Steven Levy
8 Google employees invented modern AI. Here’s the inside story. →
“They met by chance, got hooked on an idea, and wrote the ‘Transformers’ paper — the most consequential tech breakthrough in recent history.”
The Verge / Ariel Shapiro
TikTok’s podcast boom might be a bust →
“Even when a video gets multiple tens of thousands, I would be lucky if I got more than single-digit numbers of clicks in a day.”
WIRED / Kate Knibbs
Here’s proof you can train an AI model without copyrighted content →
“OpenAI claimed it’s ‘impossible’ to build good AI models without using copyrighted data. An ‘ethically created’ large language model and a giant AI dataset of public domain text suggest otherwise.”
404 Media / Jason Koebler
Deadspin is becoming a gambling referral site →
“A poorly protected IP address suggested that the new owner had ties to the online gambling industry.”
Substack / Richard J. Tofel
What went wrong at the Center for Public Integrity? →
“What to make of this, beyond mourning the loss of CPI itself, and its good journalism? A great deal of the focus, as I hope the narrative above reflects, should be on a Board that seems to me, fairly consistently, not to have provided the necessary leadership.”
NBC News / Daniel Arkin
Crime stories drove readers to GoFundMe campaigns, only the victims didn’t exist →
“The articles published by Blast News 365 would most likely raise eyebrows among anyone who regularly reads professionally produced news content. The articles were riddled with typos, grammatical errors, off-kilter formatting and other red flags. They were also filled with discrepancies. The father killed in the hit-and-run is alternately identified as ‘Herman Cruz’ and ‘Henry Cruz’ in the span of just two paragraphs, for example.”
Financial Times / Daniel Thomas
BBC develops AI plans and talks to Big Tech over archives access →
“The BBC is making plans to build its own artificial intelligence models, while holding talks over selling access to the broadcaster’s vast archives to Big Tech groups developing the cutting-edge technology.”