The Washington Post / Paul Farhi
An architect of Fox’s success picks a new target: Fox →“[Preston] Padden’s latest project comes freighted with irony: He hopes to persuade federal regulators to pull Fox Corp.’s licenses to operate its TV stations — the very ones he helped Murdoch maintain nearly 30 years ago.”
The New York Times / Katie Robertson
Wired names Katie Drummond as its next leader →“When I think about the moment we’re in now,” Ms. Drummond said, “with this very real human toll that we’re feeling and seeing around climate change, with the development of generative A.I., with the sort of unfathomable wealth and power and scope of major technology companies and big tech and the people that leads them, it feels like another sort of inflection moment in technology, in society.”
Tech Policy Press / Courtney Radsch
The value of news content to Google is way more than you think →“The study, conducted by FehrAdvice & Partners AG on behalf of the SWISS MEDIA publishers’ association with oversight by leading academics, assessed the value of journalistic content on the Google search engine in Switzerland and its impact on user behavior and satisfaction, concluding that the market share of Google searches that use media content results in an estimated revenue of about $440 million per year. It suggests that if Google did not have a dominant monopoly position in web search and faced serious competition, fair compensation for the value that media content provides to Google search would amount to about 40% of total revenue, or approximately $176 million per year in Switzerland alone.”
Reynolds Journalism Institute / Stacy Feldman
Columbia Journalism Review / Feven Merid
Medill Local News Initiative / Mark Caro
The New York Times / Sam Roberts
Rhoda Karpatkin, who led Consumer Reports for decades, dies at 93 →“It’s also important to recognize that Rhoda was one of the first modern-day publishers who believed that people would pay for content they considered valuable — you didn’t have to give it away, or undervalue it,” said Kimberly Kleman, a former editor of Consumer Reports.
The Guardian / Ope Adetayo
“Our history is rotting away”: the newspaper archivists preserving Nigeria’s past →“’Nigerian history is inaccessible online, and the greatest repository of that history is old newspapers,’ says Fu’ad Lawal, the founder of Archivi.ng. ‘The newspapers from our history are rotting away in libraries and private archives, and our mission is to stop the erasure and recapture all the history before we lose them for ever.’”