How AI Changes the Media Business

Why community and social network effects will be key to winning the future

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@mikemallazzo over 2 years ago

Some interesting stuff here....but I'd caution that the "personalized newspaper" has been just around the corner for four decades, starting with an MIT Media Lab project in the 80s. Also, don't forget the sentiment in 2010 was that by end of decade, the New York Times would be a small walled garden, read only by a small slice of the coastal elite. There's probably a gradually, then suddenly element to all of this but I'd venture the gradually phase lasts a LOT longer than most on tech Twitter think

Evan Armstrong over 2 years ago

@mikemallazzo there is a good chance of that! To me this feels like a downstream effect of AI. If you believe the AI exponential curve will continue at its current rate then this happens very quickly. If you believe we are about to hit another AI winter, then this is just hyperbole. Personally, I'm in the former camp, but this is definitely not a sure thing.

@mikemallazzo over 2 years ago

@ItsUrBoyEvan I think there's a third path where AI exponential curve continues but a decent number of media brands stay counterintuitively resilient against it. I mean look at some of the people the NYT and WSJ employ to write op-eds despite the wealth of far better thinkers like you who could do so much more with the platform. Vertical media I think willl be fine-- to your point, those brands are just communities of like-minded professionals with content a veneer anyway.

Local/investigative can't really get more fucked than it is already, at least in the context of for-profit media (like four reporters cover the whole city beat in Chicago) so not sure there's a huge threat there

josh spilker over 2 years ago

It could broaden the scope of journalism. If only the facts are needed for a spreadsheet a reporter could go to more city meetings and cover more events & then expand the base of what gets covered. Not sure of the revenue model for this

Evan Armstrong over 2 years ago

@joshspilker Yea there is a very positive version of this. If reporters can focus exclusively on fact cultivation they probably are able to do better, deeper work. I also worry about the revenue model—until people are willing to pay more for news, ads will be the dominant modality and I don't see this changing the user preferences.

@michaelelling63 over 2 years ago

We cannot afford to repeat the mistakes of the settlement free internet; where risk is one-sided. The power curve won't exist; it will be a right-angle with the middle hollowed out. Coming back from SXSW where I attended many AI panels I am more convinced than ever that we need to implement an economic system of incentives or disincentives to smooth the curve and remove bias; but more importantly to foster sustainability and generativity...of humanity. http://bit.ly/2iLAHlG