Deep breath: Newspaper publisher Reach has produced its first AI-generated articles, while Wired has published a (conservative) AI content policy. Elsewhere Futuri has launched the first ever radio platform powered by AI, and a new partnership with Slack means ChatGPT will be summarizing that meeting you slept through.
Oh, and Microsoft will likely have big AI news at its event on Thursday.
Itās not just your kidsā drawings: fridges are getting adorned with ads.
Hola, seƱor Beast: dubbing is helping YouTube stars go global.
AI image generators can theoretically produce anything, but maybe in practice they only produce one thing. It could end up being like synthesizers in 80s music, where most songs ended up using the same presets.
It might be TikTok, it might be thrifting, it might be the economy, but either way: cluttercore is trending.
Fashionistas unable to afford branded goods are turning to counterfeits (or ādupesā) instead.
Itās truly a two-sided economy. Amid cost-of-living struggles luxury demand is doing well, while premiumization is bringing profits elsewhere.
Meta is building a Twitter-like service, Reddit and Spotify are becoming more like TikTok, while TikTok is becoming more like YouTube and Patreon. Round and round they go.
TikTok is hoping the luck of the Irish will reduce some of the political pressure aimed in its direction.
EFL fans may soon be able to watch 3PM kickoffs on TV for the first time.
Cokeās latest āMasterpieceā campaign might turn out to be a savvy way of connecting with Gen Z. Our research has shown just how much Instagram has helped make them a generation of aesthetes.