Google: గూగుల్ నుండి కొత్త ఫీచర్‌

Google: భారత్‌లోని ఆండ్రాయిడ్ మొబైల్ వినియోగదారుల భద్రతను మరింత బలోపేతం చేసే దిశగా గూగుల్ ఒక కీలకమైన కొత్త ఫీచర్‌ను అందుబాటులోకి .

Vaartha
Social media dominates news consumption in Indonesia as TikTok surges | The-14

TikTok surges as Indonesia’s top news source, overtaking TV and print. Social media dominates, while trust in traditional outlets and news literacy declines.

The-14 Pictures
Social Media-డూమ్-స్క్రోలర్ ఉద్యోగం

Social Media: సోషల్ మీడియా ఎక్కువగా ఉపయోగించే వారికి ఒక ఆసక్తికరమైన అవకాశం లభించింది. ఇన్‌స్టాగ్రామ్‌, యూట్యూబ్‌ వంటి ప్లాట్‌ఫార్మ్‌లలో గంటల

Vaartha Telugu

So, have you ever said to yourself, "Self, I wish that I could read online news more like a newspaper? Well do I have your ticket!

Backstory: I frequently read news headlines/stories for a friend no longer able to read. Among the news sources is CNN, particularly its "lite" headlines page. Though I found myself frustrated that 1) there is no context other than the headline, 2) the headlines themselves are utterly unorganised, and 3) a huge portion of them are fluff (sport, entertainment, style, food, etc.). I was hoping I might be able to do better. I'd hinted at this a few months ago on HN: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42535359.

One bright note is that CNN's URLs contain much of the organising information already, with section heading as well as the date (YYYY/MM/DD). Parsing those is a Simple Matter of Programming (SMOP). Organising them takes ... a bit more work, but what I ended up with my Mark I implementation was the "lite" headlines page organised by section, with the sections themselves ordered by my own interest in them. That alone was a vast improvement.

I still wanted to go further; in particular, I wanted to include lede 'graph context for stories. Which meant pulling down the related articles themselves. ...

... Which I've spent the past few days doing.

Mark II such as it is consists of a few shell scripts to pull, parse, and generate the website. What I've laid out is very much styled as a classic newspaper: all text, no images, and of course, no ads. It takes a few minutes to update the page, which I then view locally, or copy to my e-ink tablet. For those wondering, no, this is not publicly available. (Yet?)

What's curious for me is how much saner this presentation is than virtually any current online news site, most of which far more resemble picture galleries (with utterly gratuitous images) than information services. The ability, as with the days of print newspapers, to glean the main gist of a story without having to click through, and then ward off cookie, paywall, TOU, nag, autoplay video/audio, dickbars, etc., etc., provides a cognitive ease that's hard to express.

This is also giving me pause to consider why online news looks and acts the way it does, both in terms of UI/UX and content, to which I can only suggest that virtually all the incentives are perverse, on both the publisher and reader perspectives.

Screenshots show a general sense of the layout as well as detail views of parts of the page. There are still some layout glitches (I've been writing Flexbox CSS for approximately a week now 😺 ), but I'm pretty happy with it, and much happier than with the original. Oh, and the design is remarkably responsive even without @media queries.

(There's more design work in the page itself, including internal cross-references and URL rewrites to the https://lite.cnn.com/ page itself, some of which I'm fairly chuffed about, but ... screenshots for now.)

Thoughts are now toward a news-page generator which incorporates a number of different sources, with some sense of categorisation and prioritisation applied to those. Still sorting how to proceed on that.

Oh, and preempting questions about why this particular site and its quality:

CNN is easily parseable and not paywalled. There area other options which fail one or both of these tests, e.g., NPR has nonsemantic URLs, the NY Times is parseable but paywalled, etc. I'm working with what is to hand but am more than open to better alternatives.

The HN link above includes stats on the section distribution itself, which ... is less than ideal, as well as the substantvity of much of what remains (dittos). F'rex, a couple of days ago, one of the three "Science" stories ... largely revolved around a spaced-out pop singeress. Not exactly what I'd call hard-hitting content. Three months on the relative percentage still hold. Aggregating those to larger groupings, the overall article breakdown as of this posting is:

  • US: 1984 (29.94%)
  • World: 1311 (19.79%)
  • Business: 977 (14.74%) (Economy|Business|Markets|Tech|Cars|Investing|Media)
  • Science: 557 (8.41%) (Science|Climate|Weather|Health)
  • Trivia: 1796 (27.11%) (Travel|Food|Homes|Entertainment|Sport|Style|CNN)
  • Total: Total: 6625

(For those summing totals: there's one "unclassified" story, an opinion piece.)

#newsSites #WebDesign #OnlineNews #paperize

I don't have a baseline (though can think of a few places I might look...)[1], b... | Hacker News

തിരുവനന്തപുരം: കർമ ന്യൂസ് എംഡി അറസ്റ്റിൽ ഓൺലൈൻ വാർത്താ ചാനലായ കർമ ന്യൂസിൻ്റെ എംഡി വിൻസ് മാത്യുവിനെ പൊലീസ് അറസ്റ്റ് ചെയ്തു. കളമശ്ശേരി സ്ഫോട...#karmanews, #vinsmathew, #kalamasheri, #onlinenews

https://politicaleye.news/karma-news-md-arrested/

കർമ ന്യൂസ് എംഡി അറസ്റ്റിൽ, - POLITICAL EYE NEWS

കർമ ന്യൂസ് എംഡി അറസ്റ്റിൽ #karmanews

POLITICAL EYE NEWS
Privacy setting increases online news reading by 54%, major European study reveals: New research shows disabling cookie tracking leads to higher engagement with news content, challenging digital advertising assumptions. https://ppc.land/privacy-setting-increases-online-news-reading-by-54-major-european-study-reveals/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=mastodon #PrivacySettings #OnlineNews #CookieTracking #DigitalAdvertising #NewsEngagement
Privacy setting increases online news reading by 54%, major European study reveals

New research shows disabling cookie tracking leads to higher engagement with news content, challenging digital advertising assumptions.

PPC Land

"Like nearly everyone else on the internet, yesterday the staff of 404 Media learned the name “Luigi Mangione” and sprung into action. This ritual is now extremely familiar to journalists who cover mass shootings, but has now become familiar to anyone following a news story that has captured this much attention. We have a name. Now: Who is this person? Why did they do what they did?

In an incredibly fractured internet where there is rarely a single story everyone is talking about and where it is impossible to hold anyone’s attention for more than a few minutes at a time, the release of the name Luigi Mangione sparked the type of content feeding frenzy normally only seen with mass tragedy and reminiscent of an earlier internet age when people were mostly paying attention to the same thing at once."

https://www.404media.co/luigi-mangione-played-among-us-breathes-air/

#Journalism #Media #News #DigitalMedia #OnlineNews

Luigi Mangione Played 'Among Us,' Breathes Air

The ritualized rifling through old internet accounts usually muddies the story more than it informs the public.

404 Media
This was not a perfect launch, but it was a great effort and gesture by the network (fyi, I work with an NPR affiliate on its web presence) #webdesign #webdev #journalism #onlinenews https://www.niemanlab.org/2024/10/with-hurricane-milton-looming-npr-stations-got-a-lower-bandwidth-way-to-reach-residents/
With Hurricane Milton looming, NPR stations got a lower-bandwidth way to reach residents

In normal times, text-only websites are a niche interest. But a natural disaster is not normal times.

Nieman Lab

The wave of #lawsuits reflect a #MediaIndustry-wide concern that #GenerativeAI will compete with established publishers as a source of information for internet users, while further sapping away dwindling #advertising revenues and undermining the quality of #OnlineNews. #Microsoft

The #Intercept, #RawStory and #AlterNet sue #OpenAI for copyright infringement | #AI
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2024/feb/28/media-outlets-sue-openai-copyright-infringement

The Intercept, Raw Story and AlterNet sue OpenAI for copyright infringement

Progressive US outlets file lawsuits claiming the company in effect plagiarized journalists’ work to develop ChatGPT

The Guardian
Nothing happened behind the scenes: Fakhrul

Political parties, participating in the protest, vowed not to return home until the govt is ousted, he added

The Business Standard