The Hollywood Reporter / Alex Weprin
Bloomberg / Ashley Carman
The growing battle over how to define a “podcast” →“In the past, podcast deals essentially revolved around controlling who could sell ads on shows. Lately, that’s been rapidly changing. If a ‘podcast’ shows up on Netflix, or stages a live event or gives rise to a merch shop, who sells the sponsorships on those various products and events? And who shares in the resulting profits? Even just selling a show as a video versus an audio program could be complicated.”
The Times of London / Emanuele Midolo and Peter Gillman
404 Media / Jason Koebler
AI slop is a brute force attack on the algorithms that control reality →“The best way to think of the slop and spam that generative AI enables is as a brute force attack on the algorithms that control the internet and which govern how a large segment of the public interprets the nature of reality. It is not just that people making AI slop are spamming the internet, it’s that the intended ‘audience’ of AI slop is social media and search algorithms, not human beings…the very nature of AI slop means it evolves faster than human-created content can, so any time an algorithm is tweaked, the AI spammers can find the weakness in that algorithm and exploit it.”
GeekWire / Kurt Schlosser
The New York Times / Martin Fackler
In Japan, a journalist takes a stand by striking out on his own →“Eight years later, his Tokyo Investigative Newsroom Tansa remains small…But Tansa, which roughly translates as ‘in-depth investigation,’ is finally making a mark. It published a series of articles from 2018 to 2021 that exposed decades of forced sterilizations of mentally disabled people, forcing the government to last year issue an apology and pass a law to pay compensation to the victims.”
Press Gazette / Bron Maher
Media Nation / Dan Kennedy
Tariffs kill a newspaper in New York →“The Cortland Standard, a family-owned daily, is shutting down in part because of Trump’s 25% tariff on goods from Canada, including newsprint, according to a story on the paper’s website. The 157-year-old paper was one of the five oldest family-owned newspapers in the U.S. The Cortland Standard Printing Co. will file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection. Seventeen employees have lost their jobs.”
Politico / Michael Schaffer
Los Angeles Times / Fidel Martinez
The Guardian / Eva Corlett
How a New Zealander working from her mum’s kitchen started a news service read by Madonna →“What began as a blog with [Lucy Blakiston and] her friends Ruby Edwards and Olivia Mercer in 2018, Shit You Should Care About has since amassed nearly four million followers on social media, including celebrities Bella Hadid, Madonna and, to Blakiston’s surprise, Joe Rogan. It has more than 80,000 newsletter subscribers, and has spawned a podcast series and book titled Make It Make Sense. Nearly half of the platform’s followers are based in the U.S., with another roughly 30% in the U.K., Australia, Canada and New Zealand….Blakiston ‘owes much’ of Shit You Should Care About to loving One Direction. The skills she gained running a One Direction fan account as a teenager were instrumental to the construction of her media company — from editing and Photoshopping to mobilizing large groups.”