PM says content creators must be paid and vows to ensure technology ‘does not
begin to chip away’ at press freedoms
Keir Starmer has said media outlets should have control over – and be paid for –
their work as artificial intelligence technology transforms the economy and the
UK.
Calling journalism the “lifeblood of democracy”, the prime minister vowed to
“champion press freedoms” and ensure that “the growing power of digital
technology does not begin to chip away” at the ability of journalists and
publishers to uphold democratic values.
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Tag - Newspapers & magazines
Media mogul and coalition of stars join the growing battle over tech firms using
creative works to train programs
It is an unlikely alliance: the billionaire media mogul Rupert Murdoch and a
panoply of leading artists including the Radiohead singer, Thom Yorke, the
actors Kevin Bacon and Julianne Moore, and the author Kazuo Ishiguro.
This week, they began two very public fights with artificial intelligence
companies, accusing them of using their intellectual property without permission
to build the increasingly powerful and lucrative new technology.
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As blogging pioneer Dave Winer’s site turns 30, it’s a reminder that good
writing and thinking has flourished beyond the reach of social media
If you log into Dave Winer’s blog, Scripting News, you’ll find a constantly
updated note telling you how many years, months, days, hours, minutes and
seconds the blog has been running. Sometime tomorrow morning the year field will
switch to 30. Which will mean that every single day for three decades Dave’s
blog will have been stirring things up.
He’s a truly remarkable figure, a gifted hacker and software developer who
embodies the spirit of the early internet. In the 1980s he created ThinkTank, a
new kind of software called an “outliner”, which computerised the hierarchical
lists we all use when planning an article or a presentation, but which were up
to then scribbled on paper. Like Dan Bricklin’s spreadsheet, it was a novel idea
at the time, but now you find outliners built into almost every kind of software
for writing. There’s even one in Microsoft Word, for God’s sake!
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Ever since Elon Musk took over Twitter, I and many others have been looking for
alternatives. Who wants to share a platform with the likes of Andrew Tate and
Tommy Robinson?
I considered leaving Twitter as soon as Elon Musk acquired it in 2022, just not
wanting to be part of a community that could be bought, least of all by a man
like him – the obnoxious “long hours at a high intensity” bullying of his staff
began immediately. But I’ve had some of the most interesting conversations of my
life on there, both randomly, ambling about, and solicited, for stories: “Anyone
got catastrophically lonely during Covid?”; “Anyone hooked up with their
secondary school boy/girlfriend?” We used to call it the place where you told
the truth to strangers (Facebook was where you lied to your friends), and that
wide-openness was reciprocal and gorgeous.
It got more unpleasant after the blue-tick fiasco: identity verification became
something you could buy, which destroyed the trust quotient. So I joined the
rival platform Mastodon, but fast realised that I would never get 70,000
followers on there like I had on Twitter. It wasn’t that I wanted the attention
per se, just that my gang wasn’t varied or noisy enough. There’s something eerie
and a bit depressing about a social media feed that doesn’t refresh often
enough, like walking into a shopping mall where half the shops have closed down
and the rest are all selling the same thing.
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Journalists are using artificial intelligence avatars to combat Maduro’s media
crackdown since disputed election
The Colombian Nobel laureate Gabriel García Márquez, who spent some of his
happiest years chronicling life in Caracas, once declared journalism “the best
job in the world”.
Not so if you are reporting on today’s Venezuela, where journalists are feeling
the heat as the South American country lurches towards full-blown dictatorship
under President Nicolás Maduro.
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Deal ‘meets audience where they are’ by pairing publisher’s content within tech
startup’s products, including ChatGPT
Condé Nast and OpenAI announced a multi-year partnership on Tuesday to display
content from the publisher’s brands such as the Vogue, Wired and the New Yorker
within the AI startup’s products, including ChatGPT and its SearchGPT prototype.
The financial terms of the deal were not disclosed. The Microsoft-backed, Sam
Altman-led firm has signed similar deals with Time magazine, the Financial
Times, Business Insider owner Axel Springer, France’s Le Monde and Spain’s Prisa
Media over the past few months. The deals give OpenAI access to the large
archives of text owned by the publishers, which are necessary both for training
large language models like ChatGPT and for finding real-time information.
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It cannot be right that Musk can sow discord without personal risk. He’s a
jetsetter: perhaps fear of unexpected detention will concentrate his mind
The way social media is making headlines currently is not without precedent: a
fragile narcissist posting relentlessly on a social network he’s made his own.
We know well how this has ended in the past; Donald Trump’s furious posts after
his election defeat led to the assault on the Capitol on 6 January 2021. The
aftermath of that episode saw the then president suspended from Twitter,
Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and even, to the dismay of those hoping to
mood-board the Mar-a-Lago aesthetic, Pinterest.
This time is likely to be different, not least because the person agitating the
social media furore, Elon Musk, owns the platform he is using.
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X owner deletes post sharing faked Telegraph article that claimed convicted
rioters would be sent to detention camps
Elon Musk shared a fake Telegraph article claiming Keir Starmer was considering
sending far-right rioters to “emergency detainment camps” in the Falklands.
Musk deleted his post after about 30 minutes but a screenshot captured by
Politics.co.uk suggests it had garnered nearly two million views before it was
deleted.
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