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Those summaries appear on the top of the Google search homepage, with links to “dig deeper,” according to Google’s overview of SGE. Most significantly, publishers want to be compensated for the content on which Google and other AI companies train their AI tools – a major sticking point around AI. In late September Google announced a new tool, called Google-Extended, that gives publishers the option to block their content from being used by Google to train its AI models. Publishers want clicks to secure advertisers, and showing up in Google search is key to their business. When given the option, websites are blocking their content from being used for AI if doing so doesn’t impact search, according to exclusive data from AI content detector Originality.ai.
Persons: Annegret, Jon Fosse ”, , Japan –, , Danielle Coffey, Forrester, Nikhil Lai, , Helen Coster, Kenneth Li, Claudia Parsons Organizations: Google, Arena, REUTERS, NPR, The New York Times, Reuters, News Media Alliance, Washington Post, Thomson Locations: Berlin, Germany, United States, India, Japan, Paris, SGE
Look of the Week: Kim Kardashian debuts a fake buzz cut
  + stars: | 2023-09-26 | by ( Leah Dolan | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +3 min
CNN —What comes to mind when one thinks of Kim Kardashian? Yet that was the image CR Fashion Book released into the world on Monday for the cover of the magazine’s 10th anniversary edition. Kardashian also wears a smudged white DSQUARED2 tank top and specs from Old Focals. Kardashian’s buzz cut, too, offers an instant injection of cool — lately, the close crop has been sported by everyone from Emma Corrin to Florence Pugh. Nadia Lee Cohen/CR Fashion Book“Ugly is attractive, ugly is exciting,” Miuccia Prada (Miu Miu’s founder and creative director since 1993) told British newspaper The Telegraph back in 2013.
Persons: Kim Kardashian, Nadia Lee Cohen, Kardashian, Matt Benns, “ Kim Kardashian, Chucky, it’s, , Miu Miu’s, Bella Hadid, influencer, Emma Corrin, Florence Pugh, Miuccia Prada, Paris, , Carine Roitfeld, Cohen Organizations: CNN, British, White Locations: Focals, athleisure
A circulating screenshot of a purported article by The Atlantic headlined “White Supremacy is now a multi-species movement” is fabricated and echoes a similar fake headline addressed by Reuters Fact Check in May. A spokesperson for The Atlantic said the screenshot is a fake. Anna Bross, senior vice president of communications for The Atlantic, said via email that the screenshot was fabricated. Reuters has previously addressed fake headlines attributed to The Atlantic (here), (here), including an example that circulated in May 2023 depicting a similar headline about white supremacy (here ). The Atlantic did not publish an article headlined “White Supremacy is now a multi-species movement.” The screenshot circulating online is fabricated.
Persons: , Mel Brooks, , Adam Goldsteinowitz, Anna Bross, Read Organizations: Atlantic, The Atlantic, The, Reuters Locations: Europe, Nazi
Raids on news organizations, big or small, are exceedingly rare in the US and the Friday seizure of computers, cell phones, and other material from the Marion County Record generated enormous backlash. “RSF welcomes the withdrawal of the search warrant and the return of the Marion County Record’s property, but we still need answers as to how this happened. It’s “still up in the air,” Meyer told Tapper, in response to a question about whether the outlet will file a lawsuit. “A smaller newspaper might be easily intimidated by this,” Meyer told Tapper. “If it weren’t for the outpouring of support we got on this,” Meyer told McMaster, “we’d probably be out of business by now.”
Persons: Eric Meyer, KSHB, Jessica McMaster, , ” Meyer, , , Joel Ensey, Clayton Weimers, ” Weimers, “ RSF, Jake Tapper, Meyer, It’s “, Tapper, McMaster, “ we’d Organizations: CNN, Marion County, Wednesday, Press Locations: Marion, Marion County, Kansas
A small town in Kansas has become a battleground over the First Amendment, after the local police force and county sheriff’s deputies raided the office of the Marion County Record. Raids of news organizations are exceedingly rare in the United States, with its long history of legal protections for journalists. At the Record, a family-owned paper with a circulation of about 4,000, the police seized computers, servers and cellphones of reporters and editors. They also searched the home of the publication’s owner and semiretired editor as well as the home of a city councilwoman. The searches, conducted on Friday, appeared to be linked to an investigation into how a document containing information about a local restaurateur found its way to the local newspaper — and whether the restaurant owner’s privacy was violated in the process.
Persons: Bryan Carmody, Jeff Adachi Organizations: Marion County Locations: Kansas, Marion, United States, Wichita, San Francisco
Katie Drummond will be the next top editor of Wired, overseeing the tech publication’s teams around the world. Condé Nast, the publisher of Wired, announced on Thursday the appointment of Ms. Drummond as its global editorial director. Ms. Drummond joins from Vice Media, where she was the senior vice president of global news and entertainment, in charge of Vice News and the company’s digital brands. Ms. Drummond will be the first woman to lead Wired in its 30-year history. Ms. Drummond, 37, was an intern at Wired in 2009.
Persons: Katie Drummond, Condé Nast, Drummond, Ms, Gideon Lichfield, Lichfield, Organizations: Wired, Vice Media, News Locations: United States, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Britain
Politico said Monday that its top U.S. editor was stepping down and would be replaced by one of the publication’s co-founders, John Harris, who will also take on additional responsibilities for Politico’s international editions. Matt Kaminski, who joined Politico nearly a decade ago from The Wall Street Journal, will conclude his tenure as editor in chief at the end of August, Goli Sheikholeslami, Politico’s chief executive, said in an email to the staff Monday. Ms. Sheikholeslami said in her memo that the new role for Mr. Harris, who had been serving as editorial chair, would be expanded to include all of Politico’s editorial units under his purview. “To be clear: John is not returning to a job he once had,” Ms. Sheikholeslami said. “To the contrary, he is stepping into a new role as the single top editorial executive in the company, with newsrooms in the United States and Europe reporting to him.”
Persons: John Harris, Matt Kaminski, Goli, Sheikholeslami, Harris, John, ” Ms, , Organizations: Politico, Wall Street, newsrooms Locations: United States, Europe
The average temperature has increased over the last two decades, the Met Office said, countering misleading claims circulating online. According to the Met Office, however, its data show a long-term trend of rising temperatures, including an increase in UK temperature over the last two decades. “The Met Office’s preferred smoothing pattern for the UK temperature series clearly shows warming over the last two decades,” he said. In comparison to the 30-year period 1961-1990, the average UK temperature increased by 0.8°C between 1991 and 2020 (here). The average temperature has increased over the last two decades in the UK, according to the Met Office, Britain’s national weather service.
Persons: , Grahame Madge, , Madge, ” Will Jones, Read Organizations: Met Office, Daily, Reuters, UK Met Office Locations: Lincolnshire
An image of a fabricated Courrier International magazine cover circulating online does not appear in the French outlet’s online archive of authentic covers and Courrier International took to Twitter to confirm that it is fake. “Cutting satire from the French magazine Courrier International showing Ukrainian forces on their ‘counter attack’ on the river Styx. However, there is no record of such a cover in the Courrier International online archive (here). On May 26, Courrier International tweeted in response to a user sharing the fabricated cover, “This cover is fake and was not published by Courrier international. The Courrier International cover depicting Ukrainian forces crossing the River Styx is fabricated and it does not appear in the outlet’s online archive of authentic covers.
Persons: Read Organizations: Courrier, Twitter, Ukrainian, Reuters
Los Angeles Times to Cut More Than 10% of Newsroom
  + stars: | 2023-06-07 | by ( Katie Robertson | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
The Los Angeles Times is cutting more than 10 percent of its newsroom jobs, its executive editor, Kevin Merida, said on Wednesday. In an email to staff, Mr. Merida said the company was restructuring and would eliminate 74 roles as a result. A spokeswoman for the news organization, Hillary Manning, said about 500 people would remain. “The restructuring stems from the same persistent economic headwinds facing news media across the country,” Mr. Merida said in the email, which was obtained by The New York Times. “Collectively, we have done a vast amount of work as a company to meet the budget and revenue challenges head-on.
Persons: Kevin Merida, Merida, Hillary Manning, Mr Organizations: Los Angeles Times, The New York Times, Locations: Merida
Rebellion Over College Rankings Seems Likely to Fail
  + stars: | 2023-01-27 | by ( Josh Zumbrun | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Harvard has is among the universities that have stopped cooperating with U.S. News & World Report on the publication’s rankings of law and medical schools. In the past two weeks, Harvard, Stanford and Columbia universities, the University of Pennsylvania and the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai said they would stop cooperating with U.S. News & World Report’s medical-school rankings. That followed the decision last year by universities including Yale, Georgetown, Harvard, Stanford, Columbia and California, Berkeley to quit cooperating on the publication’s law-school rankings.
A screenshot purporting to show a future headline for an article published by The Conversation asks why the “unvaccinated did not do more to warn” people who were inoculated with a COVID-19 vaccine, but it is fabricated. No such article has been produced for later publication either, according to the author named in the fake screenshot. Siani has also flagged the fake headline via his LinkedIn feed (bit.ly/3R5bYr6). The authentic article published in The Conversation discussed discrimination and attitudes toward unvaccinated people in various countries, based on a study published in the journal Nature in early December (here). An article penned by an academic at the University of Portsmouth on potential discrimination faced by unvaccinated people was altered to include a fake headline, text and date.
A fabricated news report saying the Biden administration is investigating a high-profile arms dealer for providing U.S. made weapons to Russia was created as satire. Viktor Bout, dubbed “the merchant of death” and “the sanctions buster”, is a Russian arms dealer who was arrested in 2008 for various charges related to arms trafficking, Reuters reported (here). ?”, “Got them from Afghanistan maybe” and “And the clown show continues.”A representative for New York Post told Reuters that the screenshot does not show one of its articles. Reuters did not find any evidence that an article with this headline exists on the New York Post website (here). An inauthentic New York Post article circulating online claiming a Russian arms dealer sent U.S. weapons to Russia has been taken seriously by some online.
A screenshot that was made to look like a New York Post article says the Biden administration drafted legislation that would prohibit the filming or photographing of illegal immigrants at the U.S.-Mexico border. While the story was created as satire, some people online took it seriously. The image appears to show a New York Post article in its color scheme and format, but the publication’s title has been changed to “New Fork Post” with authors “Veterans Take Back” and “Political Goof” – indicating the image was likely created as a spoof. Reuters did not find any evidence that an article with this headline exists on the New York Post website (here) . An inauthentic New York Post article circulating online, which claims the Biden administration banned the recording of migrants at the southern border, has been taken seriously by some.
And recently, Dr Pepper has been gaining ground on its competitors, even as the overall soda market goes flat. “One of the bright spots … has been Dr Pepper.”Founded in 1885 in Waco, Texas, Dr Pepper was the first in a wave of 19th-century upstart soda companies. Courtesy Keurig Dr PepperToday, Dr Pepper advertises itself as a treat, using a pint-sized mascot called Lil’ Sweet in its commercials. After Dr Pepper established itself as an alternative to mainstream colas, it launched on a path that ultimately made it part of the country’s third-largest soft drink maker, Keurig Dr Pepper. Dr Pepper hits the sceneDuring the wave of mega-mergers in the 1980s, Coca-Cola tried to scoop up Dr Pepper.
LONDON, Dec 24 (Reuters) - Britain's Prince Harry and his wife Meghan on Saturday dismissed an apology by the tabloid Sun newspaper for publishing a column highly critical of Meghan as a "PR stunt" and said the newspaper had not contacted her to say sorry. "A true apology would be a shift in their coverage and ethical standards for all. loadingThe Duke and Duchess of Sussex, as Harry and Meghan are officially known, stepped down from royal duties in March 2020, saying they wanted to make new lives in the United States away from media harassment. In a Netflix documentary series, Meghan spoke about how her treatment by the media had left her feeling suicidal as well as concern over whether she and her children were safe. Reporting by Sachin Ravikumar: Editing by Nick MacfieOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
But after his 19% margin win on Tuesday over Democrat Charlie Crist, DeSantis may in fact be the Republican Party’s savior. Somebody needs to deliver the GOP from Trump, and from that victory margin to his polling ahead of the former president, signs point to DeSantis as The One. The cheeky right-aligned New York Post on Wednesday ran a “DeFuture” cover of the DeSantis family (“Young GOP star DeSantis romps to victory in Florida”). Trump versus DeSantis is a fight between two men with messiah complexes who want us to believe each is the leader America needs. Could DeSantis win a national election?
However, there is no evidence the tweet exists, and Abbott told Reuters she did not write such a tweet. However, Abbott told Reuters via email that she “did not post the follow-up tweet”. There is also no evidence the alleged tweet in the screenshot exists, nor that it was posted and then later deleted. For example, her legitimate tweet about the alleged rape at the hotel was covered here, here and here. Diane Abbott told Reuters she did not post the follow-up tweet from the screenshot and there is no evidence it ever existed.
The New York Post's verified Twitter account was hacked Thursday morning, resulting in a series of vulgar tweets designed to look like real headlines. In tweets that have since been removed, hackers posted fake headlines that referred in offensive terms to New York Gov. In an email, a spokeswoman for the Post confirmed the publication’s Twitter account was hacked and said the company was “investigating the cause.”The Post is one of New York City's quintessential daily tabloids, known for eye-catching headlines and conservative-leaning editorials. The employee added that the person who compromised the Post's feed seemed very familiar with the publication's editorial style. The newspaper's website appeared to be functioning normally after the profane tweets were deleted.
"Star Trek: Discovery" actor Anthony Rapp testified Wednesday that the moment Oscar-winning actor Kevin Spacey allegedly climbed on top of him at a New York City party in 1986 was "the most traumatic single event of my life" and caused "lingering impacts." Rapp was 14 at the time of the alleged encounter and Spacey was 26. Rapp testified that at some point, an apparently drunk Spacey entered the room, lifted him up, placed him on a bed and rested his body on top of him. "I never wanted Kevin Spacey's career," Rapp told jurors. Rapp testified that he has shared his Spacey allegation with friends over the years, but he does not know "the number" of people he has told.
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