#95 - Info Drift
Gen Z swims in a sea of digital content every day, including memes, social media, chats, videos, influencers, and news from many sources. A recent study by Google's Jigsaw team , which focuses on online politics and polarization, explores how Gen Z sorts through this information. Most of their digital experience is in what researchers call 'timepass mode'; in short, they are just looking to not be bored. Rather than engaging in a traditional, information-seeking journey to answer specific questions, Gen Zers figure things out by bouncing around online in a more dialogical and exploratory way.
Instead of verifying facts like older generations, they rely on social feeds and comments to gauge what's important or true. They don't read long articles and distrust anything with ads, paywalls, or clickbait. Instead, they follow trusted influencers and use social cues to decide what to believe. Jigsaw's study isn't based on large polls but on in-depth interviews with a diverse group of 13- to 24-year-olds. While you probably shouldn't draw broad conclusions from this qualitative research, it does match recent data showing that all of us are consuming less formal news content and relying more on social networks to stay informed.
AI
Time has struck a multiyear content licensing deal and strategic partnership with OpenAI . OpenAI now has access to Time's archives and real-time content to train its models and enhance user queries, citing and linking back to Time.
However, OpenAI's partners might not be very happy with how it is executing its part of the deal. A Nieman Lab tests show ChatGPT is directing users to broken URLs for at least 10 publications with OpenAI licensing deals. This highlights a fundamental problem: a good chatbot and a good web index may be fundamentally at odds.
Related AI use case: The O'Reilly learning platform's AI reliably answers learners' questions, credits its sources, and pays royalties to those sources.
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And an AI reality-check to consider during the summer. The AI revolution should be in full swing. And yet, for most enterprise customers, AI adoption remains a challenge and shows a very different dynamic.
NEWS
A new study finds that people think journalism is increasingly driven by profit, with journalists more focused on making money than delivering unbiased news. This makes news consumers very skeptical of most news reports.
This year’s EBU News Report addresses the impact of artificial intelligence (AI) on journalism and the news industry. It presents an array of practical case studies, checklists, and first-hand insights into managing the implementation of generative AI in news organizations.?
Digiday and Arc XP surveyed 115 publishers to understand the state of publishers’s traffic; 80% said search traffic was down in 2023. The number one response, at 81%, is a renewed drive to video.
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领英推荐
VIDEO
NBCUniversal is adding a twist to its Paris Olympics coverage by using an AI version of Michael Phelps to provide personalized daily recaps. The AI-powered commentator will host the mobile-focused, 10-minute “Your Daily Olympic Recap on Peacock.
Similarly, AI advancements are making waves in Hollywood. According to analyst Doug Shapiro , despite the rapid progress of AI video models like OpenAI's Sora and Google's Veo, traditional filmmaking won't be replaced anytime soon due to labor relations, unresolved legal issues, and technical limitations.
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AUDIO
Universal, Sony, and Warner have filed a lawsuit against Suno and Udio , accusing them of infringing on copyrighted songs with their AI music generators. You can listen to the AI-generated ripoff songs that got Udio and Suno sued here.
Spotify is highlighting a relatively new issue: artificial streams . These are fake streams created by bots or scripts, which distort genuine listening numbers. If left unchecked, they shift revenue from legitimate artists to bad actors, undermining the fairness of the platform.
In the UK, podcast listenership has reached an all-time high. According to a new Edison Research study 42% of people tune into podcasts monthly, while 30% are weekly listeners.
The New York Times is planning to put many of its podcasts behind a paywall.
SHORT
READ
An exceptionally long Meta-Media piece (warning: in French) on influencer journalism. Link
MIT Tech review on how generative AI could reinvent what it means to play. Link
And McKinsey released a State of the Consumer 2024 survey. Link
That's it for this week! After some intense weeks of curating and collecting during evenings and weekends, Wayfinder is taking a long summer break to recharge. We'll be back in mid-August. Enjoy your summer!
Head of Product Development bei Lensing Media | Digital Media, Journalismus
4 个月Thank you, your newsletter is always very fruitful. Enjoy the well-deserved break ??
Media & Tech | Strategy & Partnerships
4 个月thanks a lot Ezra for the sumup! as usual, super useful to kick off the week
journalist | experienced digital strategist | speaker | supervisory board member
4 个月Thank you Ezra and enjoy your summer!