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Core copyright violation claim moves ahead in The Intercept’s lawsuit against OpenAI
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Core copyright violation claim moves ahead in The Intercept’s lawsuit against OpenAI
The ruling comes after a judge dismissed similar claims filed by Raw Story and AlterNet earlier this month.
By Andrew Deck
Are Americans’ perceptions of the economy and crime broken?
This election cycle showed that our evaluations of external reality are increasingly partisan. Can the media bridge the gap?
By Joshua Benton
Remember Nuzzel? A similar news-aggregating tool now exists for Bluesky
The creator of Sill says “the death of the link” has had disastrous consequences for journalism, art, and the web. His free social media tool entered public beta on Friday.
By Sarah Scire
The Atlantic’s Sarah Zhang on covering the science and emotion of being human
“I’ve always liked to think of myself as a brain floating through space…[but] our physical condition constrains and expands the way we think about ourselves.”
By Neel Dhanesha
What will a second Trump term mean for the Freedom of Information Act?
The law itself is likely to stand, but experts expect a surge in requests, longer delays, and more court dates.
By Andrew Deck
The Green Line creates local news for the people turning away from “big-J journalism”
The Green Line combines events, explainers, and solutions to appeal to young Torontonians.
By Sophie Culpepper
Two-thirds of news influencers are men — and most have never worked for a news organization
A new Pew Research Center report also found nearly 40% of U.S. adults under 30 regularly get news from news influencers.
By Sarah Scire
The Onion adds a new layer, buying Alex Jones’ Infowars and turning it into a parody of itself
One variety of “fake news” is taking possession of a far more insidious one.
By Joshua Benton
The Guardian won’t post on X anymore — but isn’t deleting its accounts there, at least for now
Guardian reporters may still use X for newsgathering, the company said.
By Laura Hazard Owen
What should journalists do when the facts don’t matter?
“You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make it drink…Journalists need to understand how distributing true and useful information out into the world can be its own rewarding service — no matter what happens next.”
By Michael J. Socolow
I’m a journalist and I’m changing the way I read news. This is how.
Sometimes it’s healthy to do something you love less, and differently.
By Laura Hazard Owen
Core copyright violation claim moves ahead in The Intercept’s lawsuit against OpenAI
The ruling comes after a judge dismissed similar claims filed by Raw Story and AlterNet earlier this month.
By Andrew Deck
Are Americans’ perceptions of the economy and crime broken?
This election cycle showed that our evaluations of external reality are increasingly partisan. Can the media bridge the gap?
Remember Nuzzel? A similar news-aggregating tool now exists for Bluesky
The creator of Sill says “the death of the link” has had disastrous consequences for journalism, art, and the web. His free social media tool entered public beta on Friday.
What We’re Reading
Vanity Fair / Natalie Korach
Reporters brace for the frenzy of a second Trump White House
“While these reporters (and many more) will undoubtedly tap their sources to ferret information out of the White House, Trump has a habit of breaking news himself by posting on social media at inopportune times, including late at night and on weekends. [Chief White House correspondent for The New York Times Peter Baker] says that after learning from 2016, news organizations have a responsibility to ‘recognize that we’re not going to jump on every single stray voltage that comes out of his phone.'”
The Guardian / Karen Middleton
Journalists won’t be criminalized for holding some Australian government secrets after law reforms
“[Federal attorney general] Mark Dreyfus has also agreed to repeal parts of the law that make it a criminal offense to publish any information stamped ‘protected’, ‘secret’ or ‘top secret’ – meaning actual or likely harm is determined by the content of a document, not just the label on it.”
The New Republic / The Daily Blast with Greg Sargent
Trump’s eruption of rage at The New York Times offers an unnerving hint of what’s coming
“…in his rant, Trump demanded that the Times show obeisance to him because he won the election, perhaps providing an early glimpse of how he will seek to cow the media into submission.”
Columbia Journalism Review / Feven Merid
How Twitter turning to X changed journalism
“’Sourcing and linking to tweets as sufficient evidence of a conversation, or a thing worth reporting on, I found even in the heyday of that ecosystem to be unproductive and limiting,’ said Shamira Ibrahim, a writer and editor at Africa Is a Country. To Ibrahim, it takes away from the practice of nurturing beats and sources in depth. ‘I think social media is always going to be part of the story, but not the whole story, and I try to engage with writers who understand that or help them get to that place.’”
CNN / Liam Reilly
The majority of social media influencers don’t verify information before sharing it, according to a new UN report
“According to the UNESCO study, 62% of surveyed creators said they don’t vet the accuracy of content before sharing it with their followers. Roughly one-third of influencers said they shared information without checking its validity if it originated from a source that they trusted, while 37% said they verified information with a fact-checking site before circulation.”
Mongabay Environmental News / Gustavo Faleiros
Environmental journalism as the link between local and global
“The essence of our work is to contextualize the changes in peoples’ daily lives, influenced by the rise in international oil prices or the arrival of a devastating pandemic. Extreme climatic events necessarily lead to this connection. What we saw in 2024, with events such as the mega drought in the Amazon, was proof that, like never before, an entire generation of journalists is now talking about climate change and its unprecedented impacts.”
Platformer / Casey Newton
Google keeps meddling with the web
“With all eyes on the search giant’s dominance, and the government proposing a forced divestiture of Chrome, you’d think that Google would strive not to highlight its influence over the web.”
404 Media / Jason Koebler
X’s objection to the Onion buying Infowars is a reminder you do not own your social media accounts
“X calls itself ‘the sole owner’ of X accounts, and states that it ‘does not consent’ to the sale of the Infowars accounts, as doing so would ‘undermine X Corp.’s rightful ownership of the property it licenses to Free Speech Systems [Infowars], Jones, or any other account holder on the X platform.’ Again, X accounts are transferred in bankruptcy all the time with no drama and with no objection from X.”
The Verge / Lauren Feiner
Google and the DOJ make their final arguments in the ad tech monopoly case
“Google is once, twice, three times a monopolist,” the DOJ says.
Columbia Journalism Review / Meghnad Bose
Meet the anonymous woman journalist reporting inside Taliban-run Afghanistan
“Once the piece is ready to be published, Maryam removes all traces of her reporting from her devices, including deleting every email and call log, except for contacts with her immediate family. ‘If the Taliban checks my phone [and finds something], it will not be good for me. So, I delete everything,’ she said. She only publishes the article after she has confirmed again that her subjects are comfortable with everything they’re quoted as saying. ‘It’s my job to keep her safe,’ she said.”
Nieman Lab is a project to try to help figure out where the news is headed in the Internet age. Sign up for The Digest, our daily email with all the freshest future-of-journalism news.