Business Insider / Jyoti Mann
Expect a paid pro version of Bluesky next month →“The company plans to launch a paid subscription model by the end of this year, which will include features such as customizable aesthetics, avatar frames, and more video uploads or high-resolution images.” (Bluesky Blue?)
The Nutgraf / Chatwan Mongkol
Reporters Without Borders
At least 15 news outlets have faced legal threats after reporting on Indian cybersecurity giant Appin →“Whether based in the US, Switzerland, France or India, any media outlet investigating the ‘ethical hacking’ of Appin, a company co-founded by Indian investor Rajat Khare, can expect letters demanding they retract their publication at best, and legal prosecution at worst. This type of pushback on journalism is not uncommon, yet the scale, impact and systematic nature of these letters and lawsuits are astonishing.”
Nieman Reports / Marc Fisher
The Washington Post / Elahe Izadi
The latest news? Not right now, thanks. →“It’s not clear how widespread this ‘turn off the news’ movement is. For one, there is general news fatigue that predated the election. And it’s too early to tell whether news publishers are seeing drop-offs in their audiences. While many saw their post-election-week ratings and audiences down in 2024 compared with 2020, that could pick back up as the transition progresses and Trump takes office.”
The Jerusalem Post / Eliav Breuer
Israeli government imposes sanctions on Haaretz, cutting all ties and pulling advertising →“It is unacceptable for the publisher of an official newspaper in the State of Israel to call for sanctions against it and support the state’s enemies in the midst of a war, while international bodies harm the legitimacy of the State of Israel, its right to self-defense, and actually impose sanctions, including criminal sanctions, against it and against its leaders.”
TechCrunch / Maxwell Zeff
Nature / S. Shyam Sundar et al.
Most people share articles on social media without reading them first →“Here we analyzed over 35 million public Facebook posts with uniform resource locators shared between 2017 and 2020, and discovered that such ‘shares without clicks’ (SwoCs) constitute around 75% of forwarded links. Extreme and user-aligned political content received more SwoCs, with partisans engaging in it more than politically neutral users.”
The Washington Post / Manuel Roig-Franzia
Reynolds Journalism Institute / Martina Guzmán
Verdad is a new free tool to investigate misinformation on Spanish-language radio →“For the past five weeks, VERDAD has recorded 40 Spanish language radio stations in the states of Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Arizona, Nevada, Michigan, Georgia, and North Carolina, as well as states with large Latino populations like Texas and Florida. It records and highlights possible conspiracy theories, misinformation, and disinformation about the LGBTQ community, immigration, abortion, reproductive rights, voter suppression, and more.”
The Atlantic / Ali Breland
The right has a Bluesky problem →“Liberals and the left do not need the right to be online in the way that the right needs liberals and the left. The nature of reactionary politics demands constant confrontations—literal reactions—to the left…The more liberals leave X, the less value it offers to the right, both in terms of cultural relevance and in opportunities for trolling.”
The Guardian / Killian Fox
Jeff Jarvis on how to make a better internet: Demote the geeks →“Printers were all-important at the beginning, they made every decision, and then they were just hired to do an industrial job. Radio, similarly, was a kind of mysterious technology until it wasn’t, and I think the same will be true of the internet and, eventually, AI. With AI, I think that, ironically — and unintentionally — it’s the geeks demoting themselves. I’m not a coder but I can now have a computer do what I want it to do without coders.”
Financial Times / Hannah Murphy
Donald Trump’s return sends shivers through the anti-misinformation world →“‘I think it will be just a tsunami of critiques and witch hunts,’ said Megan Squire, the deputy director for data analytics at the Southern Poverty Law Center. ‘I suspect some people in academia where you get to choose your research will self-censor or soften their research, or shift their application area.'”
The Washington Post / Aaron Gregg
Press Gazette / Bron Maher
Press Gazette / Bron Maher
Bloomberg / Ashley Carman