Slate Magazine / Scott Nover
When a lifetime Rolling Stone subscription isn’t for life →“‘That was not our agreement. Our agreement was the lifetime of you or the lifetime of the magazine, if you pay $99—and $99 back then was a lot of money for a magazine subscription.’ He even put the subscription in his son’s name so it would live on beyond him.”
The Hollywood Reporter / Winston Cho
Hollywood nightmare? A streaming service that lets viewers create their own shows using AI →“Fable Studio, an Emmy-winning San Francisco startup, on Thursday announced Showrunner, a platform the company says can write, voice and animate episodes of shows it carries. Under the initial release, users will be able to watch AI-generated series and create their own content — complete with the ability to control dialogue, characters and shot types, among other controls.”
Rest of World / Russell Brandom
What the AI boom is getting wrong (and right), according to Hugging Face’s policy chief →“It’s actually more expensive by token to train on and generate non-English languages. You’re paying a higher price to process each unit of data, especially non-Latin character languages. But that’s getting a lot better as costs come down. OpenAI with their latest GPT-4o launch has shown huge reductions in the cost of tokenization for many Indic languages.”
The Washington Post / Joseph Mann
The Grayzone editor’s ties to Iran and Russia show misinformation’s complexity →“Hacked emails and other documents from the Iranian government-funded Press TV show payments of thousands of dollars to a writer who is now a Washington-based editor for Grayzone, whose founder regularly appears on Russian television and once accepted a trip to Moscow for a celebration of Russian state-controlled video network RT that featured Vladimir Putin.”
The Washington Post / Laura Wagner
New York Times made ‘petty’ cuts to staff bios, union says →“The goal of letting reporters’ individuality shine, the Times said, was to ‘bolster trust with readers by letting them know who we are and how we work.’ But in some cases, it seems a little too much personality came through for the company’s liking. This week, the Times deleted language that several employees used in their bios to extol the work they have done with the Times Guild.”