Kamis, 31 Agustus 2017

Ev Williams on Medium’s Spotify-ish future, why publishers left, and why he changed his mind about ads: The latest from Nieman Lab

Nieman Lab: The Daily Digest

Ev Williams on Medium’s Spotify-ish future, why publishers left, and why he changed his mind about ads

“What we want to do is create the best possible place to support great content. How does the best media in the world work? In almost every case, the best media is supported by those who consume it.” By Laura Hazard Owen.

From a former CNN producer, The Cipher Brief covers national security way beyond cable news

“Imagine a newsroom where half of the room is analysts and half is reporters. You combine what each of them is so good at doing and deliver that every day to the reader.” By Laura Hazard Owen.
What We’re Reading
Times Open / JP Robinson
Moving the New York Times games platform to Google App Engine →
“Beyond being able to quickly move to a more reliable platform, we've also managed to cut our infrastructure costs in half during this time period. As gaming at The New York Times continues to grow, I'm confident we made the right choices to enable us to experiment, iterate and scale at speed with ease.”
Anchor / Michael Mignano
Rethinking audio editing on mobile →
“How do we make the actual editing process dead simple? Anything that involved dragging or tapping a very precise point within a waveform seemed ridiculously overcomplicated.”
Digiday / Jessica Davies
German publishers are joining forces against the duopoly →
“By teaming with non-media companies, Axel Springer has taken a different route than a typical media alliance. This way, it can skirt any disagreements that can arise between competitors and stunt progress…But Verimi is open-standard, so although Axel Springer is currently the only media group involved, others can join.”
Recode / Peter Kafka
Apple’s TV plans are still stuck in neutral →
“For years, Apple had very ambitious ambitions in TV: Steve Jobs wanted to build an integrated TV set/pay TV service, but he never got close to the terms he would have needed from TV programmers to make it work.”
The Verge / Casey Newton
How YouTube perfected the feed →
“One of the key things it does is it's able to generalize. Whereas before, if I watch this video from a comedian, our recommendations were pretty good at saying, here's another one just like it. But the Google Brain model figures out other comedians who are similar but not exactly the same — even more adjacent relationships. It's able to see patterns that are less obvious.”
The New York Times / Kenneth P. Vogel
Google critic ousted from think tank funded by the tech giant →
“And after this story was published online Wednesday morning, [New American CEO Anne-Marie] Slaughter wrote on Twitter that it was ‘false.’ She failed to cite any errors on Twitter or in a statement issued hours later through New America. Ms. Mariani did not respond to requests to identify errors or to make Ms. Slaughter available for an interview.”
Washington Post / Margaret Sullivan
The Newseum opened as the journalism industry tanked. No wonder it’s in deep trouble. →
“I hope the Newseum makes it through this crisis and fulfills its crucial mission of educating the public about free expression and press rights. If it has to do so in a less grandiose building — or some modest fraction of its current one — so be it.”
Digiday / Ross Benes
USA Today’s Facebook-like mobile site increased time spent per article by 75 percent →
USA Today’s mobile site “has tested a personalized design on its mobile website that serves users different content depending on whether they regularly visit the site or not, landed on an article organically or via search, their location and their viewing habits.” It’s working.
Medium / Meredith Talusan
On Mic.com and minority life in startup media →
“It seems to me that the problems plaguing Mic are pretty standard across media, and seem traceable to the fact that the further you go up in the food chain, the likelihood of the folks being maler and whiter increases, with minorities in those positions often hampered or blocked by the white male majority.”
New York Times / Sophie Haigney
Newseum’s leader resigns amid review of finances →
“In their statement, the Freedom Forum's leaders said the board might consider ‘a possible outright sale’ of the large building in downtown Washington that has housed the museum since 2008. They also noted the difficulty of charging hefty admissions fees — $24.95 per ticket — in a city where Smithsonian museums are free.”
Street Fight / Tom Grubisich
Some thoughts from Hearst Newspapers on Facebook’s local news subscription experiments →
“Given the revenue shares that Facebook competitors like Apple take – usually 30% – it will be interesting to see where this goes if Facebook proves to be a subscription driver rather than simply the primary engine for users to sample free news content [via a porous paywall that Facebook reportedly wants to give users 10 free looks at content before a subscription is required].”

Rabu, 30 Agustus 2017

Stories about Russia “are so hot right now” — so BuzzFeed is partnering with Meduza for more substantive Russia reporting: The latest from Niema

Nieman Lab: The Daily Digest

Stories about Russia “are so hot right now” — so BuzzFeed is partnering with Meduza for more substantive Russia reporting

“There's an enormous interest in Russia we really haven't seen since the Cold war.” By Shan Wang.

Which is the bigger morning news podcast, The Daily or NPR’s Up First? And does it matter?

Plus: Gimlet launches a history show, DGital Media rebrands, and the launch of a new “improvised sci-fi sitcom.” By Nicholas Quah.
What We’re Reading
Nieman Reports / Michael Blanding
These news outlets are bringing innovation, urgency, and new audiences to stories on climate change →
“I mean, God damn it. Twenty years from now, people will look back at NBC, CBS, and ABC and wonder what the bleep were they thinking.”
Street Fight / Tom Grubisich
Hearst’s president on working with Facebook: “We'll see if this commitment grows beyond these initial steps” →
“Hearst is an alpha partner in this subscriptions effort with Facebook, and we consider ourselves a collaborative partner who is helping to inform the effort and make it work. We have not launched yet, so while this 100 percent revenue commitment by Zuckerberg is initially helpful, we don't know if that revenue share will persist in the future.”
Insider / Nicholas Carlson
Business Insider launches its shows for Facebook’s new video product Watch. One is about cheese →
Facebook formally announce its new video offering, a YouTube-like destination within the platform, earlier this month. Business Insider’s lifestyle brand Insider was a partner on creating content for that space.
Recode / Dan Frommer
Apple’s Sept. 12 iPhone event — its most important in years? →
For one, the new pro iPhone and Apple's ARKit for augmented reality apps could drive some jaw-dropping demos that Android just can't do on mainstream scale.
Axios / Sara Fischer
Smartphone users spend 96% of their app time within their top 10 most-used apps →
Smartphone users spend half their time on their most-used app, according to a comScore report. Google and Facebook own the overwhelming majority of traffic to these apps and are the top app for every age group.
American Press Institute / Laurie Beth Harris
How can news organizations help readers tell the difference between news and opinion? →
Previous research found that 32 percent of Americans have trouble telling news and opinion stories apart. New analysis by the Duke Reporters' Lab found that news organizations aren’t making that easier: Of the 49 publications studied, only 20 of them — about 41 percent — labeled article type at least once.
BuzzFeed / Craig Silverman
The guy who tweeted the photo of the shark in the streets of Houston after Hurricane Harvey wants you to know he regrets nothing →
“Of course I knew it was fake, it was part of the reason I shared the bloomin’ thing. What I had expected was to tweet that and have my 1,300 followers in Scotland to laugh at it. This was, of course, the intent.”
Digiday / Max Willens
Armed with a $5.4 million round of funding, The Athletic plans to grow local sports news subscriptions →
The Athletic co-founder Alex Mather has said he would like the to reach 100,000 subscribers by year-end (paying $7.99 per month or $48 per year for access to articles).

Selasa, 29 Agustus 2017

Want more audience engagement in video form? This startup is betting there’s a business in there: The latest from Nieman Lab

Nieman Lab: The Daily Digest

Want more audience engagement in video form? This startup is betting there’s a business in there

“We want to help newsrooms pull content in, which is exactly the opposite of what newsrooms have been doing: pushing content out.” By Stav Dimitropoulos.

With its interactive news team, Time is finding new ways to engage readers and tell stories

“We want to keep giving people experiences that push boundaries on the web and aren’t possible at all in print.” By Ricardo Bilton.
What We’re Reading
Reveal / Reveal staff
Reveal host Al Letson helped save a man being beaten at an anti-hate rally →
“Our editorial policy is clear: we are unbiased observers not participants. However, in reviewing the video, it is clear that Al did not take sides. Instead, he responded as any of us might if we saw another human in distress.”
Philly.com / Mark Fazlollah
Freelance journalist killed covering South Sudan civil war →
“I left academia because I believed that out here in a place where humanity is at its most exposed and raw, I might better understand something fundamental about the way the world works and the way history is made — about who people really are.”
Quartz Bot Studio / John Keefe
Meet Brian and Kendra, the new hosts of Quartz's newscast →
“Three times a day, or when news breaks, the written words from five stories are sent to a text-to-speech service called Polly, another Amazon product. ‘Brian’ and ‘Kendra’ are two of many voices available on the Polly service. In mere moments, we get back an .mp3 audio file for each story, with the written words converted into synthesized speech. That audio becomes the newscast.”
Business Insider / Tanya Dua
BuzzFeed, famously anti-banner ads, plans to start running them →
“This is a marked departure for the media company, which has firmly rejected traditional banner ads since its inception. BuzzFeed, instead, has pioneered the native advertising format, driving millions of readers towards its signature posts, quizzes and videos that are produced as paid advertising on behalf of advertisers. It has long run banner ads that connect to these in-house native ads.”
Facebook Newsroom / tchannick
Facebook will be blocking ads from pages that repeatedly share fake news stories →
“We've found instances of Pages using Facebook ads to build their audiences in order to distribute false news more broadly. Now, if a Page repeatedly shares stories that have been marked as false by third-party fact-checkers, they will no longer be able to buy ads on Facebook. If Pages stop sharing false news, they may be eligible to start running ads again.”
Recode / Kara Swisher
Facebook has hired former NYT public editor Liz Spayd as a consultant in a ‘transparency’ effort →
Her charge: To get Facebook to share more about itself. She is unlikely to write a lot on Facebook's blog, said a spokesperson — instead, Spayd's role will be as an outsider who is inside, one who pushes boundaries at Facebook.
Wall Street Journal / Li Yuan
The news reads you in China — and people can’t get enough of it →
Apps that use algorithms to scour tens of thousands of sources to find news and tailor feeds to individual users are the country's fastest-growing mobile segment. Take Shen Yun, a programmer in Beijing, who spends up to three hours on the app reading international and technology news during his commute. The news aggregator app Toutiao has learned that he watches videos of funny stunts before going to bed, so has some ready for him when he opens it at night.
Poynter / Kristen Hare
As Houston floods, this independent journalist is delivering the news to hundreds of thousands of people →
Space City Weather, a small Houston-focused weather site, has become a vital resource for Texans affected by Hurricane Harvey.

Sabtu, 26 Agustus 2017

Is “platform” the right metaphor for the technology companies that dominate digital media?: The latest from Nieman Lab

Nieman Lab: The Daily Digest

Is “platform” the right metaphor for the technology companies that dominate digital media?

Metaphors don’t just highlight a comparison — they also downplay the aspects they don’t capture. And “platform” papers over some of the big questions social media raises. By Tarleton Gillespie.

When it comes to the academic study of fake news, “bullshit receptivity” is a thing

Plus: The importance (or not) of identifying news sources, big companies go rumor-hunting, and how easy it is to plant a fake poll. By Laura Hazard Owen.
What We’re Reading
Reynolds Journalism Institute / Jennifer Nelson
What two Florida TV stations learned from experimenting with AR and 3D technologies →
“We use the virtual set every day for every single show. We can transition from the real set to the virtual set seamlessly. As far as the augmented reality-type stuff, it takes a really long time to make these. We can't order something to be made that day and get it that day. We have to think weeks and months in advance.”
The Tow Center
A comprehensive timeline of platform developments, for news publishers →
“The developments tend to fall within a few categories: Product changes, launches, and expansions (rollout of Instant Articles); Partnerships with publishers (Google News Lab, Facebook Journalism Project); Policy developments (efforts around fake news and terrorism and terms of use); Changes to curation and news feed algorithms (reducing clickbait); and Advertising/revenue (more ad formats, support for subscription.)”
BuzzFeed / Craig Silverman
How global media company International Business Times uses overseas labor and a ghost office to power its Australian edition →
“A review of IBT Australia’s website by BuzzFeed News found that its Australian news content is actually being produced by writers in the Philippines, and the address listed for its Australian office is occupied by people who say they don’t work for the company.”
Columbia Journalism Review / Joshua Adams
A journalist’s new podcast explores the secrets behind fact-finding →
“I hope it shows the behind-the-scenes processes of an article or a scientific study. That stuff doesn't always end up in the final piece, and as we have many people in the public questioning the media, questioning science, questioning expertise, I think talking about the process is important.”
Journalism.co.uk / Madalina Ciobanu
Pen, paper and data: Orb’s approach to global reporting →
“Each of Orb’s stories are usually simultaneously published in four formats – text, audio, multimedia, data – and translated into four of the world’s most widely spoken languages: English, Spanish, Arabic and Portuguese. As it grows, the organization hopes to expand to ten or eleven languages, making its work accessible to as many readers as possible.”
Digiday / Max Willens
The Washington Post expands PowerPost, its newsletters for DC power players’ inboxes →
“In the past three months, it has expanded PowerPost, a 2-year-old vertical focused on newsletters and a podcast targeted at Beltway insiders and decision-makers, from one newsletter to four, with the other three focused on energy, finance and health care. It's also added three new journalists to the original team of two, plus two researchers and ad tech to sell custom native advertising inside its newsletters.”
The Hollywood Reporter / Natalie Jarvey
Humans of New York docuseries coming to Facebook →
“Humans of New York is one of the handful of shows that Facebook is funding for its new Watch video tab, which it announced earlier this month. Watch is currently rolling out and features a mix of short-form content — produced by video publishers such as Group Nine’s Thrillist and The Dodo and Vox Media — as well a handful of signature, funded projects that are longer in length.”
Politico / Tyler Fisher
Our left-right media divide told through Charlottesville →
“How partisan Twitter users saw and shared different narratives of Charlottesville and the aftermath.”
News-Sentinel
Fort Wayne’s News-Sentinel will stop publishing in print →
“The News-Sentinel announced today its intent to move primarily to a digital product in the coming months. The News-Sentinel will now sharpen its focus on more timely, topical and in-depth coverage of the region’s news without the constraints of the afternoon print cycle.”
Bloomberg / Mark Bergen
Google rolls out its biggest crackdown on extremist YouTube videos →
“Videos tagged by its new policy won't be able to run ads or have comments posted, and won't appear in any recommended lists on the video site. A warning screen will also appear before the videos, which will not be able to play when embedded on external websites. YouTube will let video creators contest the restrictions through an appeals process, a spokeswoman said.”

Jumat, 25 Agustus 2017

Mexico-based Pictoline’s graphic explainers thrive on social media (and advertisers love them too): The latest from Nieman Lab

Nieman Lab: The Daily Digest

Mexico-based Pictoline’s graphic explainers thrive on social media (and advertisers love them too)

The majority of Pictoline’s revenue — it’s profitable and brought in $1 million last year — now comes from creating sponsored illustrations for advertisers. By Mariana Marcaletti.
What We’re Reading
Recode / Dan Frommer
These are the 10 most popular mobile apps in America (No. 1: Facebook) →
According to comScore's U.S. mobile apps report: 1. Facebook, 2. YouTube, 3. Facebook Messenger, 4. Google Search , 5. Google Maps. (10. Pandora).
Financial Times / Hannah Murphy, Andrew Hill, and Shannon Bond
Bloomberg expands into consulting in its search for a new media model →
A new service launched this month, aimed at competing with management consultants and media agencies, already has five clients (the consulting offering costs clients between $150,000 and $200,000 a month on average).
Poynter / Alexios Mantzarlis
In its first decade, PolitiFact helped define political fact-checking far beyond Washington, D.C. →
Political fact-checking groups all around the world from Chile to Iran to Israel to Italy also cite PolitiFact as inspiration for their own efforts at holding public figures to account: “PolitiFact was instrumental in the way we understood the field of fact-checking.”
The Economic Times
WhatsApp is looking for ways to curb misinformation on its platform →
“We definitely do not want to see fake news on our platform and it’s a complex problem in determining what is fake and what isn’t. Because of the encryption, we can’t read the contents of the messages.”
Facebook / Mark Zuckerberg
Mark Zuckerberg: Facebook is testing subscriptions for news organizations through Facebook, won’t take a cut of the revenue →
“We plan to start with a small group of U.S. and European publishers later this year and we'll listen to their feedback.”
Product / Lauren Bertolini
The A.V. Club is now on Kinja →
The A.V. Club is the third that Gizmodo Media Group has migrated onto Kinja this year.