The New Yorker / Clare Malone
Is Hunterbrook Media a news outlet or a hedge fund? →“Horwitz was slightly evasive when I asked what Hunterbrook pays its journalists. No one was making less than a hundred thousand dollars as a base salary, he said. ‘The upper limit is potentially incredibly high because it’s based on the performance of an investment fund, which is not an upside opportunity that reporters have had access to.’ Another side market for Hunterbrook employees, he went on, is filing whistle-blower reports with the S.E.C.”
Mashable / Chase DiBenedetto
Intelligencer / Justin Miller
The Guardian / Dan Sabbagh
The New Yorker / Kyle Chayka
The revenge of the homepage in a post-social world →“The major social platforms operated for a long time like digital big-box stores for media content, offering a little of everything all at once…Now digital-distribution infrastructure is crumbling, having become both ineffective for publishers and alienating for users.”
The Washington Post / Laura Wagner
In campus protests, students are wary of the media →“Faculty members in yellow vests manning the entrance to the [Columbia protest] space last week turned reporters away, saying it was the protesters’ choice. Everyone would have to wait for the official student news conference, beginning shortly.”
The New York Times / Michael M. Grynbaum
The New York Times / Brian X. Chen
Meta’s AI assistant is fun to use, but it can’t be trusted →“Unlike other chatbots and image generators, Meta’s A.I. assistant is a free tool baked into apps that billions of people use every day, making it the most aggressive push yet from a big tech company to bring this flavor of artificial intelligence — known as generative A.I. — to the mainstream.”
The Guardian / Alexandra Topping
The Guardian / Abbas Rezaie
Can journalism survive the Taliban? →“The Etilaat Roz was once the most widely circulated newspaper in Kabul, but everything changed in August 2021 when the Taliban seized power in Afghanistan. With journalists tortured in the street for their reporting, the paper’s staff were forced to flee.”