Wednesday, August 9, 2023 |
“I’m really interested in these beautiful, touchable representations of data that use texture to encode information in a way that our screens cannot reproduce.” By Sarah Scire. |
What We’re ReadingNew York Times / Kellen Browning
ESPN jumps into online gambling with $2 billion casino deal →As part of the transaction, the casino company Penn Entertainment is selling Barstool Sports back to its founder, David Portnoy.The Nevada Independent / Jannelle Calderon
North Las Vegas is using AI to translate public meetings in real time →“During public comment or in a presentation by a Spanish speaker, a translated transcription of the person’s words can be seen on large screens at the front of the room. Accuracy depends on the speed and clarity of the speaker, but the audience can also see how the AI technology will often try to fix the sentence and clean up words so it makes sense.”Yahoo News / AFP
Canadian publishers ask government to investigate Meta’s blocking of news articles →The publishers asked the Competition Bureau to prohibit Meta from continuing to block Canadians’ access to news and pressed Meta to “refrain from discriminating, by algorithm or by any other means, against content from Canadian news organizations.” Meta “began the process of ending news availability” on Facebook and Instagram in Canada
earlier this month. TheWrap / Lucas Manfredi
BuzzFeed is still burning through millions in cash →“The struggling digital media company that
shuttered its news branch amid companywide layoffs in April reported second-quarter revenue of $77.9 million Tuesday and a net loss of $27.8 million, for a loss per share of 20 cents, missing Wall Street estimates.” Committee to Protect Journalists / Gulnoza Said
Violence against journalists in the Netherlands is dimming a beacon of press freedom →Reporter Peter De Vries’ killing was the most serious attack on journalist safety in a country where press freedom has long been taken for granted.Axios / Sara Fischer
The Atlantic thinks it might (finally) reach profitability in 2024 →“Despite slower ad and sponsorship sales, The Atlantic has currently booked more overall revenue to date compared to this time last year, thanks to a surge in subscriptions, Thompson said.” (For context, roughly 60% of The Atlantic’s revenue comes from consumer subscriptions and 40% from advertising and events.)Rest of World / Martin K.N Siele
TikTokers are documenting — and monetizing — anti-government protests in Kenya →“The phones keep us safe in a way. People protesting point them at the police officers, so they don’t arrest or shoot us.” the Guardian / Amanda Meade
Australia’s national broadcaster has shut down almost all its accounts on Elon Musk’s Twitter →The ABC cited “toxic interactions” and increasing costs. Axios / Dan Primack
Barstool’s Dave Portnoy beat the house →“Portnoy gets hundreds of millions of dollars via the original Penn Gaming sale — albeit not all $551 million, since an outside investor owned 51% — and less than four years later gets back 100% control of what he sold.”
Nieman Lab / Fuego
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