The New York Times / Mike Ives
Canada will force Google and Facebook to pay news outlets for linking to articles →“The law, passed on Thursday, is the latest salvo in a push by governments around the world to force big companies like Google and Facebook to pay for news that they share on their platforms…With some caveats, the new Canadian law would force search engines and social media companies to engage in a bargaining process — and binding arbitration, if necessary — for licensing news content for their use.”
ProPublica / Jesse Eisinger and Stephen Engelberg
Behind the scenes of Samuel Alito’s unprecedented Wall Street Journal prebuttal of a ProPublica story →“Six hours later, The Wall Street Journal editorial page posted an essay by Alito in which he used our questions to guess at the points in our unpublished story and rebut them in advance. His piece, headlined ‘Justice Samuel Alito: ProPublica Misleads Readers,’ was hard to follow for anyone outside ProPublica since it shot down allegations (notably the purported consumption of expensive wine) that had not yet been made.”
The New York Times / Charlie Savage
How Charlie Savage tied Pink Floyd and “The Wizard of Oz” together →“Nearly three decades ago, I wrote the first article about it when I was a summer intern at The Journal Gazette in my hometown, Fort Wayne, Ind. In recent months, as various music magazines and websites have been putting together packages about ‘The Dark Side of the Moon’ in honor of its 50th anniversary, I have received a surge in interview requests about this article I wrote when I was 19, which has become an absurd footnote to my career as a national-security and legal journalist.”
The New York Times / Nico Grant
Russia blocked Google News during the abortive insurrection this weekend →“After Russia invaded Ukraine last year, many Western technology companies pulled their services and products out of Russia or were blocked. TikTok and Netflix suspended their services in the country. Facebook was blocked. Twitter was partly blocked and Apple, Samsung, Microsoft, Oracle, Cisco and others pulled back or withdrew entirely.”
The Washington Post / Ben Strauss
FanDuel makes betting lines. FanDuel’s Shams Charania moves them. →“‘I don’t think there is anything nefarious going on, but I find it puzzling that a regulated Sportsbook is allowed to take bets on the NBA draft and also employ an “insider” who can tweet nonsense that can move the betting markets,’ tweeted Haralabos Vargoulis, a prominent NBA bettor and former member of the Dallas Mavericks front office.”
The New York Times / Mike Isaac
The Guardian / Joanna Partridge
Duke Reporters's Lab / Mark Stencel, Erica Ryan, and Joel Luther
Misinformation keeps spreading, but the growth of fact-checking has leveled off →“In our 10th annual fact-checking census, the Duke Reporters’ Lab counts 417 fact-checkers that are active so far in 2023, verifying and debunking misinformation in more than 100 countries and 69 languages. While the count of fact-checkers routinely fluctuates, the current number is roughly the same as it was in 2022 and 2021.”
Hong Kong Free Press / Irene Chan
The Guardian / Lisa O'Carroll
Draft EU plans to allow spying on journalists are dangerous, critics warn →“On Wednesday, the European Council — which represents the governments of EU member states — published a draft of the European Media Freedom Act that would allow spyware to be placed on journalists’ phones if a national government thought it necessary. Unusually, the council did not take the step of holding an in-person meeting of ministers responsible for media before the draft was published.”
Reuters / Dietrich Knauth
News organizations challenge court decision on FTX customer privacy →“U.S. Bankruptcy Judge John Dorsey in Wilmington, Delaware, ruled earlier this month that FTX did not have to reveal its customers’ names because doing so could expose them to identity theft and other scams…Bloomberg, Dow Jones & Company, The New York Times Company and the Financial Times…have argued that FTX is not entitled to a ‘novel and sweeping exception’ to bankruptcy’s typical disclosure requirements simply because its customers used cryptocurrency.”
The New York Times / Benjamin Mullin
Barry Diller is no longer trying to sell The Daily Beast →“Until recent days, according to people with knowledge of the talks, he had been in discussions about a deal with Ankler Media, a start-up that has earned a reputation for its unsparing coverage of Hollywood elites since Janice Min, a longtime magazine editor, co-founded it early last year.”
Semafor / Neal Rothschild
What the Titanic vessel disaster says about media →“The Titan submersible story was an increasingly rare, shared media experience in an environment defined by consumers who watch shows at different times, get news from different sources, and get their entertainment diet curated based on individual preferences.”
Poynter / Elizabeth Djinis
Local journalism’s burnout crisis is unsustainable →“Roughly 72% of local journalists in a study of more than 500 participants reported experiencing personal burnout and 70% reported experiencing work-related burnout…The age divide is also clear: More than 75% of journalists under 45 experienced both personal and work-related burnout while 62% and 57%, respectively, of those 45 and older reported the same.”
The Guardian / Tory Shepherd