The New York Times / Benjamin Mullin
Tensions flare inside The Messenger, a fledgling news site →“Journalists have chafed at demands to mass-produce articles based on competitors’ stories. Senior editors huddled with staff on Thursday to address criticism of the site, which had come from Columbia Journalism Review, Harvard’s
Nieman Lab and The Wrap, a Hollywood trade publication. And a politics editor quit on Friday after a clash with the company’s audience chief.”
Press Gazette / William Turvill
The Washington Post / Paul Farhi
Press Gazette / Charles Baker
Why a Guardian paywall would be good for U.K. journalism →“It’s very hard to establish an identity and win an audience if people can’t read your content. But at the same time, it’s increasingly difficult for new publications to make any money if they don’t have a paywall. But then why would potential readers, who are already feeling the pinch of the cost-of-living crisis, pay for something they can get for ‘free’ from the BBC, or The Guardian?”
Inside the News in Colorado / Corey Hutchins
The New York Times / Sapna Maheshwari and David McCabe
TikTok users sue Montana, calling its state ban unconstitutional →“The ban has also set off an outcry from TikTok and civil liberty and digital rights groups…Under the law, TikTok will be fined for operating the app within the state, and app store providers like Google and Apple will be fined if TikTok is available for download in Montana.”
The Verge / James Vincent
Press Gazette / Dominic Ponsford
The New York Times / Kellen Browning
The e-sports world is starting to teeter →“After years of fanfare, e-sports in the United States are giving way to economic realities. Unable to turn a profit, team owners are cutting costs by laying off employees and ending contracts with star players. In some cases, they are selling their teams and sometimes at a loss, offering a blunt reality check to people who believed e-sports could be the next big thing in entertainment.”
The Guardian / Fiona Sturges
The New York Times / Blake Gopnik
A copyright case against Andy Warhol could have broader implications for remix culture →“Copyright law is supposed to leave room for the ‘fair use’ of someone else’s creation, but this new decision might easily be read as making Warhol’s use of [photographer Lynn] Goldsmith’s image ‘fair’ in the art world, but unfair where something closer to pure commerce is involved, such as licensing — in magazines but possibly in museum gift shops or on T-shirts.”
Press Gazette / Bron Maher
The Wall Street Journal / William Mauldin
The Washington Post / Robert Barnes and Cat Zakrzewski