The Washington Post / Paul Farhi
How the media’s wait for the facts in Trump shooting fed a backlash →“Given the enormous stakes involved in Saturday’s shooting, reporters generally exercised discipline, limiting themselves to what they could see and hear….Few of the initial accounts of the shooting — which injured Trump slightly; killed a Pennsylvania man, Corey Comperatore; and critically wounded two others — were outright wrong. Instead, readers jumped on the stories’ hesitant approach.”
404 Media / Emanuel Maiberg
AI maxers are thrilled with Trump’s Vice President pick →“People who support the rapid development of AI, specifically the self-designated ‘effective accelerationists’ (e/acc) or ‘techno-optimists,’ have latched on to two positions they share with Vance: the idea that big tech companies are promoting government regulation of AI that benefit them as incumbents, and the idea that those same companies and the government are trying to imbue AI with leftist ideology.”
Tech Policy Press / Roberta Braga and Cristina Tardáguila
The New York Times / Pete Wells
Platformer / Casey Newton
An assassination attempt for the social media age →“The rise of social media and parallel decline of mainstream journalism have enabled us to create what researcher Renee DiResta calls ‘bespoke realities’: custom versions of the truth that reflect what we already want to believe…unlike in 2020, platforms showed this weekend that they are increasingly comfortable sitting on the sidelines of contentious news stories, content to let users seek out whichever versions of the truth most appeal to them.”
Proof News / Annie Gilbertson and Alex Reisner
Tech companies used thousands of swiped YouTube videos to train AI →“Our investigation found that subtitles from 173,536 YouTube videos, siphoned from more than 48,000 channels, were used by Silicon Valley heavyweights, including Anthropic, Nvidia, Apple, and Salesforce. The dataset, called YouTube Subtitles, contains video transcripts from educational and online learning channels like Khan Academy, MIT, and Harvard. The Wall Street Journal, NPR, and the BBC also had their videos used to train AI, as did The Late Show With Stephen Colbert, Last Week Tonight With John Oliver, and Jimmy Kimmel Live.”
The Washington Post / Elahe Izadi