[Nieman Lab: The Daily Digest]
Monday, May 15, 2023 [“The world’s largest Black group chat”: Behind the mission to preserve Black Twitter]( A number of efforts are underway to document not just the content created on the platform but how Black women used it for communication and community â along with the abuse they received. By Jasmine Mithani, The 19th.
What We’re Reading CJR / A.G. Sulzberger
[A. G. Sulzberger on objectivity →](
“Independence asks reporters to adopt a posture of searching, rather than knowing. It demands that we reflect the world as it is, not the world as we may wish it to be.” Axios / Sara Fischer
[Forbes is being bought by a 28-year-old tech exec â and/or the foreign investors behind him →](
“The deal structure has the effect of obfuscating how much money foreign groups may put in, which could help alleviate any regulatory concerns. Forbes was ready to sell to the group of mostly foreign investors in March. But management feared regulatory pushback and pivoted, Axios previously reported. Forbes also faced public criticism over the involvement of Indian investment firm Sun Group, which has had ties to Russia.” Semafor / Max Tani
[Linda Yaccarino sold ads by saying social media wasn’t safe for brands. Now she’s going to run Twitter →](
“Yaccarinoâs stature reflects her and NBCâs success at holding their ground through a complicated period in recent years…Sheâs also a rarity in advertising: Sheâs an unabashed conservative, Fox News consumer, and fan of former President Donald Trump.” The New York Times / Lauren Hirsch and Benjamin Mullin
[Vice, a decayed digital colossus, files for bankruptcy →](
“A group of Viceâs lenders, including Fortress Investment Group and Soros Fund Management, is in the leading position to acquire the company out of bankruptcy. The group has submitted a bid of $225 million, which would be covered by its existing loans to the company. It would also take over âsignificant liabilitiesâ from Vice after any deal closes.” The Verge / Adi Robertson
[Google’s AI pitch is a recipe for email hell →](
“Good writing can delight us with an intriguing turn of phrase…But Googleâs onstage ideas were almost impressive in their ability to serve precisely none of writingâs core purposes. Its examples of ‘Help me write’ calcify the worst tendencies of ‘professional’ communications. Theyâre bland, bloated boilerplate that turns a human prompt into something that uses more words to say less.” Press Gazette / Bron Maher
[Dominion’s CEO says its legal costs in its lawsuit against Fox News reached “tens of millions of dollars a month” →](
“[CEO John] Poulos also disclosed that Fox wired Dominion the settlement before he had even left the courthouse. ‘Thatâs when it kind of hit home for me. I put myself in the position of a board seat [at Fox]. You know, they must have been told regular updates on this case for the last two and a half years. And I would have loved to have been a fly on the wall when they were called together to approve that wire.'” The Washington Post / Marc Fisher and Naomi Nix
[Raw videos of violent incidents in Texas rekindle debate about graphic images →](
“Newspaper editors and television news executives have long sought to filter out pictures of explicit violence or bloody injuries that could generate complaints that such graphic imagery is offensive or dehumanizing. But such policies have historically come with exceptions, some of which have galvanized popular sentiments.” The Wrap / Rosemary Rossi
[CNN CEO Chris Licht reprimanded a reporter for making his coverage of its Trump town hall “too emotional” →](
“Strongly contradicting his own networkâs full-throated defense of the event, [Oliver] Darcy slammed the town hall as a ‘spectacle of lies’ that, he implied, did harm to the country. ‘Itâs hard to see how America was served by the spectacle of lies that aired on CNN Wednesday evening,’ Darcy said in his Reliable Sources newsletter, which was released just 15 minutes after CNN released a statement touting the eventâs success.” The Philadelphia Inquirer / Jonathan Lai
[The Philadelphia Inquirer’s operations have been disrupted by a “cyber incident” →](
“The Inquirer had been unable to print its regular Sunday newspaper, and it was not clear until late Sunday afternoon that it would be possible to print Mondayâs editions of The Inquirer and Daily News newspapers. Online posting and updating of stories to Inquirer.com continued, though sometimes slower than normal.” Associated Press / Sonia Pérez D.
[Guatemala’s El Periódico newspaper is shutting down today amid its founder’s prosecution →](
“‘Our team resisted 287 days of persecution, political and economic pressure,’ El Periódico said in reference to the time since [founder José Rubén] Zamora was jailed last year.” Wired / Malcolm Harris
[Doug Rushkoff is ready to renounce the digital revolution →](
“Few thinkers are as consistently productive as Rushkoff â since the mid-nineties heâs put out a book roughly every other year â and for readers who can keep up, that output serves as a real-time tracking of his ideological trajectory, like a radar screen revealing in regular pulses the arc of a missile.” Press Gazette / William Turvill
[What drives reader contributions at The Guardian? Investigations and legal attacks →](
“[Editor Katherine] Viner said that her investigative team has grown to âabout four times the sizeâ of when she started in her role in 2015. She revealed The Guardian will soon launch an investigations team in the U.S.” Associated Press
[The Philadelphia Inquirer is experiencing a major cyberattack →](
The company was unable to print Sunday’s paper and is still working to restore print operations. Inquirer employees will not be allowed to use the newsroom offices through at least Tuesday, the paper said. The Guardian / Stephen Marche
[The apocalypse isn’t coming. We must resist cynicism and fear about AI →](
“Remember when WeWork was going to end commercial real estate? Remember when crypto was going to lead to the abolition of central banks? Remember when the metaverse was going to end meeting people in real life? Silicon Valley uses apocalypse for marketing purposes: they tell you their tech is going to end the world to show you how important they are.” Press Gazette / Charlotte Tobitt
[How The Guardian, The Times, The Economist, the FT, and Tortoise became podcasting leaders →](
“I think itâs just going to get more and more of the mass appeal. I mean, it already is a mass appeal but as I said to new audiences, new people coming into podcasting, older, younger, more diverse audiences as well.” Fast Company / Jared Newman
[Are you ready for a free flatscreen TV â with ads you can never turn off? →](
“Telly has designed a 55-inch 4K HDR TV with a built-in soundbar and a second screen mounted underneath. On that extra screen, users will see a mix of informational widgets and advertisements, which canât be disabled…’Weâre giving the device away for free, and the entire business model is supported by our advertising, data, and affiliate revenue streams…'” The Verge / Emma Roth
[Twitter’s new CEO will be Linda Yaccarino, a longtime ad exec for NBCUniversal →](
Yaccarinoâs extensive advertising background could help repair the damaged relationships between Twitter and advertisers that left the platform following Elon Muskâs chaotic takeover. (Yaccarino and Musk [reportedly]( âalso see eye to eye politically.â) The Washington Post / Lori Rozsa and Elahe Izadi
[Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis wanted to rewrite press laws. Conservative media helped kill the effort. →](
âThey were kind of down to try and âown the libs,â and didnât realize the boomerang effect it would have on conservative media,â said Brendon Leslie, editor in chief of DeSantis-friendly outlet Floridaâs Voice. âIt was a lose-lose situation.â The New York Times / Connie Wang
[Generation Connie →](
“What gave [the author’s mother] some comfort, though, was seeing Ms. Chung on TV. Here was a woman with a face like hers, with great taste in clothes, who wore beautiful makeup and had stylish hair, yet asked aggressive questions of powerful people, most of whom did not seem to treat Ms. Chung any differently because of her appearance.” [Nieman Lab]( / [Fuego]( [Twitter]( / [Facebook]( [View email in browser]( [Unsubscribe]( You are receiving this daily newsletter because you signed up for for it at www.niemanlab.org. Nieman Journalism Lab Harvard University
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