Deltamag_Shelter Seoul @ Shelter - 14 Mar feat. PRIMIT, XXOK, BASKERVILLE + more
Deltamag_Shelter Seoul @ Shelter - 14 Mar feat. PRIMIT, XXOK, BASKERVILLE + more
BOLERO: HOME COMING @ Bolero - 12 Mar feat. KIKOH, PRIMIT, BASKERVILLE + more
“The new media are not ways of relating to us the ‘real’ world; they are the real world and they reshape what remains of the old world at will.”*…
There is a vortex of forces shaping the future of journalism. Censorship, both direct and indirect, is on the rise in the U.S. and around the world. Concentration of media ownership is homogenizing coverage and creating “news deserts.”
At the same time, new technology and new applications of that technology are reshaping the Fourth estate. The Reuters Institute at Oxford surveyed 280 digital leaders from 51 countries and territories to learn what they are seeing– and planning. From the Executive Summary…
We are still at the early stages of another big shift in technology (Generative AI) which threatens to upend the news industry by offering more efficient ways of accessing and distilling information at scale. At the same time, creators and influencers (humans) are driving a shift towards personality-led news, at the expense of media institutions that can often feel less relevant, less interesting, and less authentic. In 2026 the news media are likely to be further squeezed by these two powerful forces.
Understanding the impact of these trends, and working out how to combat them, will be high up the ‘to do list’ of media executives this year, despite the unevenly distributed pace of change across countries and demographics.
Existential challenges abound. Declining engagement for traditional media combined with low trust is leading many politicians, businessmen, and celebrities to conclude that they can bypass the media entirely, giving interviews instead to sympathetic podcasters or YouTubers. This Trump 2.0 playbook – now widely copied around the world – often comes bundled with a barrage of intimidating legal threats against publishers and continuing attempts to undermine trust by branding independent media and individual journalists as ‘fake news’. These narratives are finding fertile ground with audiences – especially younger ones – that prefer the convenience of accessing news from platforms, and have weaker connections with traditional news brands. Meanwhile search engines are turning into AI-driven answer engines, where content is surfaced in chat windows, raising fears that referral traffic for publishers could dry up, undermining existing and future business models.
Despite these difficulties many traditional news organisations remain optimistic about their own business – if not about journalism itself. Publishers will be focused this year on re-engineering their businesses for the age of AI, with more distinctive content and a more human face. They will also be looking beyond the article, investing more in multiple formats especially video and adjusting their content to make it more ‘liquid’ and therefore easier to reformat and personalise. At the same time, they’ll be continuing to work out how best to use Generative AI themselves across newsgathering, packaging, and distribution. It’s a delicate balancing act but one that – if they can pull it off – holds out the promise of greater efficiency and more relevant and engaging journalism.
These are the main findings from our industry survey:
More widely, could 2026 be the year when AI company stock valuations come down to earth with a bump, amid concerns about whether their trillion-dollar bets will pay back their investors? Meanwhile the amount of low-quality AI automated content, including so-called ‘pink slime’ sites, looks set to explode, with platforms struggling to distinguish this from legitimate news.
We can expect more public concern about the role of big tech in our lives. This may include individual acts of ‘Appstinence’ and other forms of digital detox and a desire for more IRL (In Real Life) connection. Governments will also come under pressure to do more to protect young and other vulnerable groups online, even in the United States.
The creator economy will continue to surge, fuelled by investments from video platforms and streamers. At the top end creators will look more like Hollywood moguls with big budgets and their own studio complexes. Within news, we’ll also see the emergence of bigger, more robust, creator-led companies delivering significant revenues as well as value to audiences – offering ever greater competition for traditional journalism…
Read the report in full: “Journalism, media, and technology trends and predictions 2026,” from @reutersinstitute.bsky.social.
* Marshall McLuhan
###
As we ponder the prospects of the press, we might type a birthday note to John Baskerville, a pioneering English printer and typefounder, who was born on this date in 1706. Among Baskerville’s publications in the British Museum’s collection are Aesop’s Fables (1761), the Bible (1763), and the works of Horace (1770)– many printed on a stock he invented, “wove paper”, which was considerably smoother than “laid paper”, allowing for sharper printing results. And as for his fonts, Baskerville’s creations (including the famous “Baskerville,” a predecessor to the very similar Times New Roman) were so successful that his competitors resorted to claims that they damaged the eyes.
Baskerville’s first publication, an edition of Virgil. (source) #AI #artificialIntelligence #Baskerville #culture #digitalCreators #history #influencers #JohnBaskerville #journalism #literature #media #news #paper #printing #publishing #Technology #typography #wovePaperThis morning I'm heading to Uni of Birmingham to observe the BEAR Challenge!
Undergrad and Masters students competing to complete AI, data science and High Performance Computing challenges.
Today is day 2 of the three day event and I'm excited to see the challenges and talk to the teams. Reading the posts from previous years, it's a brilliant event!
https://blog.bham.ac.uk/bear/category/events/bear-challenge/
#HighPerformanceComputing #ArtificialIntelligence #HPC #AI #Birmingham #DataScience #Baskerville
Is watching all of the history talks by Lynne Yun at https://www.lynneyun.com/talks
#design #type #typography #history #lecture #video
#lettering #font #calligraphy #didot #baskerville #aldus
@lynneyun
Letterform Lecture at San Francisco Public Library: @verbosus is talking about his work on LoveFrom’s Baskerville. They started with excellent macro photos of the original steel punches.
We’ll share the recording of this talk later in the year. If you want to get notified: https://letterformarchive.org/mail/
#TypeRevivals #TypeDesign #Baskerville #LoveFrom
De verschillende locaties die in het stuk voorkomen werden allemaal op het toneel ten uitvoering gebracht.
Nu op Medemblik praat: 'Recensie Sherlock Holmes en de Hond van de Baskervilles door Theatergroep Sint Pieter'
Lees verder op: https://medemblikpraat.nl/recensie-sherlock-holmes-en-de-hond-van-de-baskervilles-door-theatergroep-sint-pieter/
#baskerville #cultuur #medemblik #recensie #sherlockholmes #sintpieter #theatergroep #toneel