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It turns out no one wants to be tracked all across their iPhones by Facebook (or anyone else)
Only 4% of the public in the US have opted in to cross-app tracking, following the deployment of the latest iOS update. That is a low number. As numbers go, there are few lower. It’s bad news for platforms like Snapchat and Facebook, which are set to be the worst hit by those changes – and the fact that 12% of people worldwide are opting in isn’t much better. Low numbers, Barry White low numbers.
Still, these platforms have been preparing for the change for a while, and have other tools in place that will mitigate will the hit. What’s interesting, as Joshua Benton points out in this piece for Nieman Lab, is what that number implies about users’ approach to their own data and publishers’ position after the fact:“
In the short term, there’ll probably be a revenue hit; news sites fill ad space with targeted ads too, and those will now be a little worse. In the longer term, this increases the chance there’ll be a cleansing flood of adtech middlemen, which is probably a necessary condition for any eventual recovery in publisher-sold advertising.”
Is there a place for new ad-supported news channels?
Looking at the harsh realities of ad-supported news channels; whether it’s right-wing and “anti-woke” or a left leaning new outlet, it’s vanishingly unlikely that ads alone can support new rolling news channels.
Prachatai: a gutsy Thai news outlet committed to being the ‘Voice of the Voiceless’
Prachatai – which means “free people” in Thai – is looking into the country’s ruling regime by investigating human rights abuses and political disappearances as well as frequently overlooked and marginalized communities. It’s public service journalism to aspire to.
The Covid reporters are not OK
This first-hand account of how hard it’s been to cover the pandemic is pretty harrowing – both in the specific terms and what it implies for journalists who have to wade into sensitive topics and deal with burnout.
This content originally appeared in The Media Roundup, a daily newsletter from Media Voices. Subscribe here: