Nieman Foundation at Harvard
HOME
          
LATEST STORY
The demand for news video is growing (and that’s a good thing for publishers)
Nieman Lab logo
ABOUT                    SUBSCRIBE
The demand for news video is growing (and that’s a good thing for publishers)
The demand for news video is growing (and that’s a good thing for publishers)
The popularity of news videos on third-party social media platforms doesn’t have to be a “doom and gloom” story for the news industry.
By Craig Robertson
Full Fact is battling AI-generated elections content with AI tools of its own
Full Fact is battling AI-generated elections content with AI tools of its own
AI imagery is no longer a hypothetical factor, but at the same time, we’ve been able to use AI in new ways ourselves to confront the challenge.
By Steve Nowottny
Overwhelmed by news on social? SaySo is betting a smaller, vetted creator feed is the answer
Overwhelmed by news on social? SaySo is betting a smaller, vetted creator feed is the answer
The vertical video news app promises creator-led “news on your terms.”
By Hanaa' Tameez
The use of AI chatbots for news is on the rise — but not everywhere
The use of AI chatbots for news is on the rise — but not everywhere
Countries where people already rely more heavily on search engines, social and video networks, and aggregators for news also tend to have higher levels of AI chatbot use for news.
By Amy Ross Arguedas
How should news organizations label their AI use for audiences? New studies suggest some answers
How should news organizations label their AI use for audiences? New studies suggest some answers
Plus: How TikTok users gauge credibility, and good news about the viability of a shift away from commercial journalism.
By Mark Coddington and Tamar Wilner
News sites are the new newspapers: People are abandoning them for social media
News sites are the new newspapers: People are abandoning them for social media
Facebook for news is on the rebound, impartial news isn’t dead, and other findings from RISJ’s 2026 Digital News Report
By Nieman Lab Staff
The Newsground turns to coffee to fund investigative journalism
The Newsground turns to coffee to fund investigative journalism
A new outlet pairs accountability reporting with a product that readers can sip.
By Hanaa' Tameez
The Big Dig podcast goes nationwide with the “Highway Teardown Tour”
The Big Dig podcast goes nationwide with the “Highway Teardown Tour”
“Ultimately bureaucracy is just people trying to accomplish something, and there’s good stories in there.”
By Neel Dhanesha
YouTube logo pile hazy
The demand for news video is growing (and that’s a good thing for publishers)
The popularity of news videos on third-party social media platforms doesn’t have to be a “doom and gloom” story for the news industry.
By Craig Robertson
Image
Full Fact is battling AI-generated elections content with AI tools of its own
AI imagery is no longer a hypothetical factor, but at the same time, we’ve been able to use AI in new ways ourselves to confront the challenge.
Image
Overwhelmed by news on social? SaySo is betting a smaller, vetted creator feed is the answer
The vertical video news app promises creator-led “news on your terms.”
What We’re Reading
Current / Tyler Falk
New York Times to bring Wirecutter podcast to public radio 

American Public Radio will distribute the show weekly; it also distributes The New York Times’ The Daily.

CNBC / Lillian Rizzo
TikTok and YouTube are reinventing sports viewership. Broadcasters are taking note

“The five-game series between the Knicks and the San Antonio Spurs generated ’15 billion views and counting on social media, the most ever for an NBA Finals and nearly triple the previous record set in 2025,’ according to the NBA.”

Project C / Liz Kelly Nelson
Introducing the Journalism Creators Startup Lab

“I am so dang happy to announce the Journalism Creators Startup Lab, a free program for early-stage independent news creators…The program is built for that early hard phase where a journalist either figures it out or gives in and starts looking at comms jobs. Think first year or two of going independent: fewer than 100,000 followers, dead serious about the work but not yet making a full-time living from it.”

The Intercept / The Intercept Staff
The Intercept sues to uncover secretive government anti-protester database

“The Intercept is asking the court to compel the government to release documents requested through the Freedom of Information Act regarding increased surveillance and travel restrictions for protesters.”

The New York Times / Katherine Rosman and Ken Belson
Dianna Russini was an N.F.L. “insider.” Was she also out of bounds?

“As a dogged reporter with an entertainer’s verve, she built her own brand and merged it with one of the most famous institutions in journalism, The New York Times Company. It seemed to be a mutually beneficial arrangement. Until it wasn’t.”

Bloomberg Law / Mary Anne Pazanowski and Nino Paoli
Nearly 400 local newspapers sue OpenAI and Microsoft for scraping their articles

News publishers that together own nearly 400 newspapers across the U.S. have sued OpenAI and Microsoft for scraping their content without permission or compensation to build AI products like ChatGPT and Copilot. The publishers include the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, The New York Amsterdam News, Newspapers of New England, the Ogden Newspapers, and Straus Newspapers.

The New York Times / Adeel Hassan
A Wikipedia founder is barred from editing articles on the site

“The site’s editors formed a consensus this week to restrict the access of the co-founder, Larry Sanger. The reason given was not any of Mr. Sanger’s broadsides against Wikipedia, which he has long criticized over what he sees as a left-wing bias, but something procedural. He had been canvassing an outside audience to sway internal policy votes, a Wikipedia Foundation press officer said on Wednesday.”

Financial Times / Hannah Murphy and Cristina Criddle
Meta races to replace human moderation with AI

“The $1.4tn tech group has accelerated plans to switch to using large language models to review content and advertising across its platforms, according to four people familiar with the matter, which could help it save billions of dollars annually. Already, Meta has replaced about 50 percent of human review requests with LLMs this year, several of the people said.”

The Guardian / Lex McMenamin
“This is injustice”: How leftist zines were used to sentence anti-ICE protesters to decades in prison

“After a three-week trial, a jury found eight of nine protesters guilty of ‘providing material support to terrorists,’ among other crimes. For the Sotos, this ‘material support’ included owning a ‘printing press’ used to print anarchist zines and being part of a leftist book club, the federal government argued. The couple had already left the scene by the time guns were drawn. All eight of the defendants sentenced so far have received unusually harsh sentences — 30 to 100 years — essentially life in prison.”

Press Gazette / Charlotte Tobitt
Climate scientists say news coverage ignores causes of U.K. heatwave

“News stories about heatwaves often do not mention the influence of climate change or the burning of fossil fuels on increased temperatures — for example, three in five stories during the May heatwave did not — while two-fifths of those about net zero make no mention of climate change. In this context, it is unsurprising that the public often do not understand these issues or the connection between them.”

Nieman Lab is a project to try to help figure out where the news is headed in the Internet age. Sign up for The Digest, our daily email with all the freshest future-of-journalism news.