https://finley-williams.com
Coordinator at the Princeton Summer Journalism Program. Former editorial fellow at Boston Review and editorial intern at The American Prospect. Cornell alumna.
Finley Williams
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New York has a surveillance pricing disclosure law that uncovered this. Condé Nast will say "but we're offering this person a discount!" Of course that's not true of everyone. They are explicitly maximizing willingness to pay.
NY just passed a surveillance pricing ban (which has some loopholes)
Got this email this morning. The @newyorker.com (Condé Nast?) is using surveillance to price subscriptions...? And I haven't seen this reported on yet..?
Finley Williams
Writing a story is one of the great joys of having reported it. Not sure why a publication would take that away from its journalists, and demean the readers who pay for these articles
Perhaps @niemanlab.org ???
Got this email this morning. The @newyorker.com (Condé Nast?) is using surveillance to price subscriptions...? And I haven't seen this reported on yet..?
Interesting to see this job posting after reading Eve Fairbanks' piece on editing AI writing in @theatlantic.com I wonder what @cleveland.com thinks their specialist will revise? To me, a huge part of editing is enhancing the writer's original voice...
www.theatlantic.com/technology/2...
Will some amazing journalist please pick this up? @ddayen.bsky.social has done some amazing reporting on data and pricing. @404media.co? @techcrunch.com?? Anyone? Am I just now finding out about something that everyone else already knows??
even while maintaining it - will that be their goal? It also looks like they want the hire to use "field inputs, including reporter notes" for the AI-written stories. Are there actually reporters who are willing to be reverse centaurs in a field they're likely passionate about? archive.ph/DqniQ