WAN-IFRA / Lucinda Jordaan
The Daily Beast / Harry Lambert
The Guardian / Angelique Chrisafis
The New York Times / Vivek H. Murthy
Ars Technica / Ashley Belanger
The Wall Street Journal / Ann-Marie Alcántara
Media Voices / Esther Kezia Thorpe
5 things we learned about the state of podcasts from the Digital News Report 2024 →“Perhaps surprisingly given its popularity among young people and the push from platforms like Spotify to increase accessibility and discoverability of podcasts, the share of podcast listening for news shows is still roughly the same as it was seven years ago.” (In 2018, 11% of those surveyed said they’d listened to a news podcast in the past month. In 2024, it was 13%.)
The Wrap / Natalie Korach
404 Media / Emanuel Maiberg
AI images in Google search results have opened a portal to hell →“The news is yet another example of how the tools people have used to navigate the internet for decades are overwhelmed by the flood of AI-generated content even when they are not asking for it and which almost exclusively use people’s work or likeness without consent.”
Nieman Reports / Ann Cooper
What the AP’s archives tell us about the press as a political institution →“But while AP’s online ‘morgue’ preserves its journalism, it’s the personal papers and institutional records in the corporate archives that tell the story behind the story — the reporting adventures, the editorial decision-making, relationships with AP members, the administrative governance — that Tunney sought to preserve.”
The Wall Street Journal / Sarah E. Needleman and Ann-Marie Alcántara
Social-media influencers aren’t getting rich — they’re barely getting by →“Platforms are doling out less money for popular posts and brands are being pickier about what they want out of sponsorship deals. The real possibility of TikTok potentially shutting down in 2025 is adding to creators’ anxiety over whether they can afford to stick with the job for the long haul.”
The Washington Post / Alexandra Petri
Talking Biz News / Chris Roush
Dow Jones, union agree to four-year contract →“Once approved, the agreement will run through June 30, 2027, and will end a year of bargaining between the two sides. The tentative agreement provides a combined minimum 8 percent wage increase for the first two years of the contract effective July 1, 2024.”
Knight Foundation / Issie Lapowsky
Translating research on digital media into policy and practice →“The clearest evidence that journalists consider this research to be vital is their shared concern about rising political attacks against researchers in this space … ‘If those researchers are being muzzled because of these lawsuits,’ says [Craig] Silverman of ProPublica, “that’s going to have an impact for journalists, as well.'” (The Stanford Internet Observatory, highlighted in this report, is
being dismantled.)