MIT Technology Review / Melissa Heikkilä
Three ways AI chatbots are a security disaster →“…But the way these products work—receiving instructions from users and then scouring the internet for answers—creates a ton of new risks. With AI, they could be used for all sorts of malicious tasks, including leaking people’s private information and helping criminals phish, spam, and scam people. Experts warn we are heading toward a security and privacy ‘disaster.’”
The Verge / Elizabeth Lopatto
The Guardian / Lucy Knight
The New Yorker / Clare Malone
The return of the non-stop Trump news cycle →“It’s important to cover deviations from historical norms that Trump and others have made and will make. The challenge of covering Trump was that his entire Presidency was a deviation. When journalists clocked his every move, it was done in the correct spirit—vigorous attention to the most important public figure in the country, if not the world—but it failed because the rules changed.”
The New York Times / Kate Conger and Ryan Mac
Twitter users are still waiting for a check-mark reckoning →“The inaction around the verification check marks showed ‘Twitter has a real crisis of credibility,’ said Graham Brookie, a director at the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab, which studies online misinformation. ‘When they say they’re going to do a thing right now, they haven’t proven that they are consistently doing those things.’”
Atlanta Magazine / Heather Buckner
The Daily Beast / Justin Baragona
Analyst News / Aan Chaudhry
Meet the Uyghur journalist working to protect her family — and her people →“Like many Uyghurs living abroad in exile, [Gulchehra Hoja’s] own family has fallen victim to the systematic repression her reporting has revealed. But she’s also been uniquely targeted: In retaliation for her work, two dozen of her family members were arrested in one night, and she herself has been put on China’s ‘most wanted’ list.”
The Rebooting / Brian Morrissey
The non-partisan news dream →“The quest for non-partisan news will continue, even if there’s little evidence of market demand. And that’s because rich elites love the concept.”