- The Great Indian Middle Class-Submerged in Consumerism and Crisis of Identity
- Global Greenhouse-Gas Emissions Hit Record High: India Joins Top Five Emitters as UNEP Warns of ‘Rapidly Closing Window’
- Can Intelligence Agencies Hack Swiss Bank Websites? Fiction, Facts, and the Secret World of Cyber Espionage
- Tariffs Tarnish the Shine: How US Trade Barriers Are Reshaping Jewellery Exports
- Strategic Minerals, Strategic Moves: U.S.–Japan Pact and China’s Rare Earth Concurrence Redefine Global Power Balance
- The West’s 200-year economic supremacy is an aberration; China and India are reclaiming their historic place
- Reporting from the Heart of Conflict — Clarissa Ward’s Courageous Chronicle of Truth and Faith
- Growing Population: National Asset or Looming Liability?
Author: newswriters
By Sofia Hernandez Ramones and Maria Smerkovich Later this week, the Group of Seven (G7) will meet in Canada for their annual summit. Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney will host the leaders of the other member countries: France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States. A bar chart showing that Americans see G7 countries positively, but people in those countries have less favorable views of the U.S. Americans have more favorable views of the other G7 countries than people in these countries do of the U.S., according to Pew Research Center surveys conducted this spring. For example,…
By Damian Radcliffe Artificial Intelligence (AI) is transforming journalism worldwide, but much of the conversation about its impact has been dominated by perspectives from the Global North. A new report from the Thomson Reuters Foundation (TRF), based on findings from a survey of over 200 journalists from more than 70 countries in the Global South and emerging economies, aims to address that. The study, which I authored, sheds light on how AI is being used, the unique challenges these newsrooms face, and the implications of this for journalists, newsroom leaders, funders and policy makers. Here are some of the…
By Damian Radcliffe Artificial intelligence is reshaping multiple industries, including journalism. In the week of World Press Freedom Day, it’s worth considering how the technology can impact media freedom. This picture is complex. On the one hand, AI, and generative AI, can be a powerful tool to support newsrooms, but it can also be weaponized against them. Globally, the state of press freedom was classified as a “difficult situation” in the latest RSF World Press Freedom Index, the first time this label has been used to categorize Against this backdrop, the U.N. notes that “AI brings new risks.”…
Artificial intelligence may bring about the end of the world as we know it – but not in the way most would expect By Dr. Mathew Maavak, who researches systems science, global risks, geopolitics, strategic foresight, governance, and Artificial Intelligence The global economy was already navigating a minefield of volatility, uncertainty, complexity, and ambiguity (VUCA) when US President Donald J. Trump’s ‘Liberation Day’ tariffs reverberated across international markets. This aggressive escalation of trade barriers, including a mélange of sudden rate hikes, retaliatory measures, and rhetorical brinkmanship, didn’t just amplify the chaos; it ignited the specter of a full-blown economic firestorm.…
Indian multimedia journalist Sudeshna Chowdhury has nearly two decades of experience, writing for a wide range of outlets on topics such as human rights, gender, and the environment. She is also a professor at UPES Dehradun. “I am invested in training the next generation of journalists in the country,” she explained. Previously, Chowdhury lived and worked in the U.S. and she has reported internationally from countries such as Japan and Turkey. Born in the town of Digboi, she’s currently based in Dehradun, which is located in the northern Indian state of Uttarakhand. Chowdhury spoke with IJNet about how she got her start in…
COPENHAGEN, Denmark — Reporters, newsroom leaders, product managers, and AI strategists gathered in the former printing press of Politiken, Denmark’s largest newspaper. The setting was apt for the third annual Nordic AI in Media Summit (NAMS), which brought together journalists from Norway, Sweden, Finland, and across Europe, to Copenhagen for a two-day conference. Full Report: https://www.niemanlab.org/2025/05/nordic-ai-in-media-summit-2025/
The Wikimedia Foundation outlined its new AI strategy on Wednesday, stressing that it’s decided to use AI as a tool to support editors, not replace them. “Our investments will be focused on specific areas where generative AI excels, all in the service of creating unique opportunities that will boost Wikipedia’s volunteers,” Chris Albon, the Wikimedia Foundation’s director of machine learning, and Leila Zia, the foundation’s head of research, wrote in a blog post outlining the changes. (Also announced Wednesday, by the way: The Wikimedia Foundation is one of five finalists for a $100 million MacArthur grant.) Full Article: https://www.niemanlab.org/2025/04/wikipedia-announces-new-ai-strategy-to-support-human-editors/
What threatens journalism is not just disinformation or hostile governments. It is who can – and who cannot – afford to enter the profession, writes news industry veteran François Nel Article Link: https://www.journalism.co.uk/news/the-freedom-gap-what-pay-and-class-reveal-about-the-future-of-journalism/s2/a1242823/
Chitranshu Tewari “AI-driven accessibility isn’t only better product design but also good business.” AI is everywhere. Amidst all the doom and hype, newsrooms are discovering a wide range of use cases for AI in journalism and its workflows. However, as with any emerging technology, this often leads to the mindless application of tools. For instance, in India, TV news channels are now filled with AI anchors. In a market notorious for misinformation, bigotry, and government propaganda, introducing an AI anchor does little to address the trust deficit among viewers. This is what I call “using AI for AI’s sake”— employing…
Mitali is an alumnus of Indian Institute of Mass Communication (IIMC). She is gold medalist of Radio of Television Journalism Post Graduate Diploma Course of IIMC Indian journalist Mitali Mukherjee has been appointed Director of the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism. Mukherjee, who has been Acting Director since Rasmus Nielsen stepped down last October, was selected in an open process that concluded in late March. Her appointment was announced by Alan Rusbridger, Chair of the Institute’s Steering Committee, and Professor David Doyle, Head of the Department of Politics and International Relations of the University of Oxford, where the…
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