AI Companies Collaborating on $10 Million In Support Projects For Newsrooms
As newsrooms continue to explore AI’s potential and what it could mean for their work, the tech companies themselves are taking steps to further their exploration.
The latest effort is from the Lenfest Institute for Journalism, founded by former Philadelphia Inquirer owner H.F. “Gerry” Lenfest in 2016, which is collaborating with OpenAI and Microsoft to “help newsrooms explore and implement ways in which artificial intelligence can help drive business sustainability and innovation in local journalism.”
In total, $10 million will be awarded over two years to support projects by Chicago Public Media (Chicago Sun-Times, WBEZ), Minnesota Star Tribune, Newsday, Philadelphia Inquirer, and Seattle Times, for AI focuses varying from text summarization and translation to media analyzation and marketing services.
Wave of News Publishers Arrive on Bluesky As Sign-Ups Surge
A wave of news publishers have arrived on Bluesky in recent days, following audiences and journalists departing X/Twitter. Days after announcing it was leaving X, The Guardian has become one of a flurry of news publishers to set up an account on the rival microblogging platform. A significant uptick in account registrations since the U.S. election has prompted a wave of new journalists and publishers to start posting to Bluesky over the past week. As of [last] Tuesday it had 20 million accounts, up from 16 million before the [previous] weekend.
Email Reigns: It’s The Most Popular Channel Worldwide
Consumers worldwide are more likely to trust a message when it contains a logo or check mark, according to Consumer Preferences Report, a study from Twilio. Of those polled, 66% refrained from purchasing from a brand in the past year due to lack of trust. But 49% say they will trust a brand much more if the message displays a logo or check mark. And 62% will likely open an email when it is confirmed to be from a brand they trust …
DOJ Says Google Must Sell Chrome To Crack Open Its Search Monopoly
The Department of Justice says that Google must divest the Chrome web browser to restore competition to the online search market, and it left the door open to requiring the company to spin out Android, too. Filed late Wednesday in DC District Court, the initial proposed final judgement refines the DOJ’s earlier high-level outline of remedies after Judge Amit Mehta found Google maintained an illegal monopoly in search and search text advertising.