The Media Copilot
While publishers fight AI in court over licensing, The Media Copilot flags a quieter parallel economy: data brokers scraping and monetizing the web at scale, with publishers seeing none of it. The piece, a conversation with Cashmere's Jonathan Woahn, reframes the AI content debate — the licensing fight is real, but the gray market underneath it may be the bigger structural problem.
The Media Copilot
An analysis of Google's strengthened position in AI despite the rise of chatbots, and how publishers may have untapped leverage over Google's AI-generated answers that are built on top of their content. The piece discusses how Google's vulnerability from a year ago has shifted as it solidifies its AI business model.
The Media Copilot
The Media Copilot flags a meaningful shift: publishers now have a regulator-backed way to opt out of Google AI Overviews — the first real crack in the take-it-or-leave-it deal that's defined the AI content standoff. Two years of feeding the machine to stay visible may finally have a third option, which could reset how platforms and content owners negotiate access.
The Believer Magazine
Sophie Haigney reviews Trevor Paglen's installation From 'Apple' to 'Anomaly,' which made ImageNet's training data physical — 30,000 categorized images pinned to a curved wall. The piece uses Paglen's work to examine what's actually inside the datasets shaping AI vision: not neutral labels, but loaded human choices. A useful gut-check on how classification encodes bias before a model ever trains.