The Washington Post / Will Oremus and Elahe Izadi
AI’s future could hinge on one thorny legal question →“Broadly speaking, copyright law distinguishes between ripping off someone else’s work verbatim — which is generally illegal — and ‘remixing’ or putting it to a new, creative use. What is confounding about AI systems, said James Grimmelmann, a professor of digital and information law at Cornell University, is that in this case they seem to be doing both.”
The New York Times / Kashmir Hill
The Washington Post / Will Sommer
Axel Springer execs are at odds with Business Insider over its Neri Oxman plagiarism story →“Neither [billionaire Bill] Ackman nor [his wife, former MIT professor Neri] Oxman…have pointed to any factual errors in the articles. Still, Ackman’s complaints seemed to get the attention of Axel Springer, the German media giant that owns Business Insider. On Sunday, the company released an unusual statement saying it would ‘review the processes’ that led up to the articles’ publication, while acknowledging that the stories were not factually wrong.”
The Wall Street Journal / Tim Higgins
Why MrBeast is rebuffing Elon Musk →“The math apparently doesn’t work for a guy like [MrBeast, a.k.a. Jimmy Donaldson], who at 25 years old has built an impressive business empire of his own. ‘My videos cost millions to make and even if they got a billion views on X it wouldn’t fund a fraction of it,’ Donaldson responded recently to Musk’s urging.”
Financial Times / Raphael Minder
The EU wants Big Tech to promote opposition media in Belarus →“Belarusian journalists in exile have complained to the commission that content critical of the regime of Alexander Lukashenko is failing to reach target audiences, in part because of search algorithms used by Google, Meta, and others, which they claim wrongfully take into account Lukashenko’s media censorship rules.”
The Verge / Adi Robertson
The internet copyright machine wasn’t made for Mickey Mouse →“Blunt-force copyright enforcement has shaped the boundaries and culture of the internet. It’s ill-equipped for a world where huge numbers of people are testing the edges of a nuanced legal framework — and as more pop culture becomes public property, the situation may only become more complex.”
The Guardian / Ashifa Kassam
Digiday / Kayleigh Barber
How media execs are bracing for another year of ad turmoil →“…I would have no reason but to be totally optimistic if not for the fact that when I have conversations with CMOs. They’re a little uncertain…There’s a sense of cautiousness and uncertainty…I’m taking them at their word and I’m tempering my enthusiasm.”
The New York Times / Alan Blinder
U.S. News makes money selling its rankings “badges” to colleges →“Many lower-profile colleges are straining to curb enrollment declines and counter shrinking budgets. And any endorsement that might attract students, administrators say, is enticing… ‘If we could ignore them, wouldn’t that be grand?’ [University of Maine at Augusta vice president Jonathan] Henry said of U.S. News. ‘But you can’t ignore the leviathan that they are.'”
The Wall Street Journal / Emily Glazer and Kirsten Grind
Elon Musk’s illegal drug use is sparking concerns at his companies →“The world’s wealthiest person has used LSD, cocaine, ecstasy, and psychedelic mushrooms, often at private parties around the world, where attendees sign nondisclosure agreements or give up their phones to enter…People close to Musk, who is now 52, said his drug use is ongoing, especially his consumption of ketamine, and that they are concerned it could cause a health crisis.”
The New York Times / Robert D. McFadden
R.I.P. Joseph Lelyveld, former top editor of The New York Times →“Cerebral and introspective, Mr. Lelyveld was for nearly four decades one of the most respected journalists in America, a globe-trotting adventurer who reported from Washington, Congo, India, Hong Kong, Johannesburg and London, winning acclaim for his prolific and perceptive articles.”
Bloomberg / Ashley Carman
Media Nation / Dan Kennedy
How Alden and Gannett inadvertently provided a boost to startup local news projects →Brant Houston: “Alden’s brazen and brutal harvesting of a disrupted and distressed news industry has made clear the long death spiral of newspapers and legacy media. And it has made clear how a new business model for journalism (usually a nonprofit model or a public benefit corporation) is needed and how independent digital newsrooms need to form deeper alliances.”
The Wall Street Journal / Alexandra Bruell
Puck taps a former Twitter customer chief as CEO →“The two-year-old publication, whose writers focus on covering power brokers in tech, media, finance and politics, has amassed around 40,000 full-paying subscribers and surpassed $10 million in revenue in 2023, according to a person close to the company.”
The Verge / Ariel Shapiro
Podcast downloads were down 24% at the end of 2023 (but there’s an explanation) →“It used to be that if you subscribed to a show, forgot about it for a while, and then returned, all of the intervening episodes would download automatically. But iOS 17 has made it so downloads pick up where you left off without those automatic downloads. In the end, it is a good thing both for your phone memory and for advertisers who want a precise idea of who is actually listening to their spots. But for publishers, it is a correction that scales their overall metrics down in the short term.”
IEEE Spectrum / Gary Marcus and Reid Southen
Generative AI has a visual plagiarism problem →“Even though prevalence may vary, the mere existence of plagiaristic outputs raises many important questions, including technical questions (can anything be done to suppress such outputs?), sociological questions (what could happen to journalism as a consequence?), legal questions (would these outputs count as copyright infringement?), and practical questions (when an end user generates something with a LLM, can the user feel comfortable that they are not infringing on copyright? Is there any way for a user who wishes not to infringe to be assured that they are not?).”
The Guardian / David Batty
The Guardian / Amelia Gentleman
“Cool, calm, precise”: How the BBC’s Mishal Husain became the interviewer U.K. politicians dread →“Her colleague Nick Robinson says senior politicians are trained to ‘fill the time with obfuscation’ and to get listeners on their side by suggesting to the audience that the presenter is ‘not being fair, not letting them have their say, interrupting them.’ But, he says, Husain’s ‘cool, calm, precise style’ does not permit that trick. ‘With her, someone in power is held to account in a way that is courteous and persistent. It’s about the wielding of the scalpel, not the bloodshed.'”