All posts tagged: journalism

How a Music Streaming CEO Built an Open-Source Global Threat Map in His Spare Time

How a Music Streaming CEO Built an Open-Source Global Threat Map in His Spare Time

Elie Habib doesn’t work in the defense or intelligence industries. Instead, he runs Anghami, one of the Middle East’s largest music streaming platforms. But as missiles began flying across the region, a side project he coded earlier this year suddenly became something bigger: an open-source dashboard people around the world were using to track the war in real time. The engineer turned executive built the system, called World Monitor, to make sense of chaotic geopolitical news. Instead, it went viral. Habib’s day job revolves around licensing deals and streaming metrics. But during a stretch of increasingly chaotic geopolitical news, he started building a tool to make sense of it. “I’m an engineer by training, and I hold myself to a discipline of continuously learning new technologies regardless of my CEO title,” Habib tells WIRED. The idea emerged as headlines began colliding in ways that felt impossible to follow. “The news became genuinely hard to parse,” he says. “Iran, Trump’s decisions, financial markets, critical minerals, tensions compounding from every direction simultaneously.” Screenshots of worldmonitor.com COURTSEY OF …

How Journalists Are Reporting From Iran With No Internet

How Journalists Are Reporting From Iran With No Internet

Coordinated Israeli and American strikes hit a military compound in Tehran on Saturday, killing dozens of senior regime figures including Iran’s supreme leader, Ali al-Khamenei. Within hours, the government imposed a near-total internet blackout, cutting the country off from the outside world. Mostafa Zadeh, a Tehran-based international journalist, tells WIRED Middle East that he was not surprised when “the United States struck, nor when his phone’s network died and fixed internet lines followed.” “It’s very similar to the state’s response to the January security crackdown, and even the bouts of unrest that came before,” Zadeh says. The government has routinely cut internet access during crises, typically citing security issues as the cause. “The Iranian government’s primary concern is preventing communication between Israeli intelligence operatives and any contacts inside the country,” he explains. “But the policy’s heaviest burden falls on journalists and local media workers who lose access to their most basic tools.” Journalists, activists, and ordinary citizens trying to document what is happening on the ground face the choice of finding a way around the …

The Women Who Reinvented Journalism

The Women Who Reinvented Journalism

This is a dangerous season for journalism. Legendary newspapers are being gutted by careless owners, foreign correspondents fired while still in war zones, local papers shut down entirely. Into the tumult come two new books that focus on some of the most pathbreaking journalists of the 1930s and ’40s. These reporters, all women, broke social norms to chronicle the seismic years they were living through. When read together, Mark Braude’s The Typewriter and the Guillotine and Julia Cooke’s Starry and Restless prompt an obvious question: Why women? In other words, what is the value of looking at the history of journalism through this gendered prism? For starters: Women were handed nothing. In many cases, when they were interested in doing serious, international stories—say, reporting on a war—they had to tell editors that they happened to be going anyway, Cooke writes, and ask: Should they send some articles? These women’s lack of access led to a resourcefulness that animated their subjects as well as their style. They also avoided the insularity of the boys’ club from …

Sky News joins media leaders to drive push for AI standards to ‘protect original journalism’ | UK News

Sky News joins media leaders to drive push for AI standards to ‘protect original journalism’ | UK News

THE FULL TEXT OF THE LETTER An Open Letter to Our Fellow Leaders in Global Media From: Tim Davie, BBC Director-General; Jon Slade, CEO, Financial Times; Anna Bateson, CEO, The Guardian; David Rhodes, Executive Chairman, Sky News; Anna Jones, CEO, Telegraph Media Group We write to you at a pivotal moment for our industry. We invite you – global leaders across publishing, broadcasting, media and news – to join us as founding members of a new coalition: SPUR – the Standards for Publisher Usage Rights coalition. Artificial Intelligence is fundamentally reshaping how content is created, distributed, discovered and monetised. We believe we need to come together to protect original journalism and secure the long-term sustainability of our industry. AI brings opportunities for publishers and our audience. Our organisations are already at the forefront of using AI in responsible ways to benefit our audiences. But AI also raises urgent questions about fairness, consent, attribution, transparency and trust. Across the industry, our reporting, our archives, our original content, have become foundational training material for AI systems. This …

Irish Times journalism now fully funded by subscribers

Irish Times journalism now fully funded by subscribers

Irish Times editor Ruadhán Mac Cormaic in the newsroom. Picture: Irish Times Revenue generated by subscribers to The Irish Times is now fully funding its journalism for the first time. That milestone includes both digital-only and print home delivery subscriptions (which feature online access by default). The Dublin-based Irish Times Group (which includes the Irish Examiner based in Cork) has around 150,000 subscribers across print and digital. Ruadhán Mac Cormaic, who has edited The Irish Times for three years and spent 17 years at the title, told Press Gazette said: “It’s important for the organisation. It’s a milestone, it’s not the destination. And there are other milestones we have to hit. “I don’t want to pretend that… we have the answer to every question. The world is moving too fast to be certain about anything. But it validates and affirms everything we’ve been doing for the last ten years.” The former assistant editor, foreign affairs correspondent and legal affairs correspondent said the newsroom has gone from thinking about being digital first, to being audience first …

Hasan Piker on influence and journalism in the algorithm age | Censorship

Hasan Piker on influence and journalism in the algorithm age | Censorship

Hasan Piker has built one of the largest online political audiences, reaching millions without newsroom oversight or traditional editorial constraints. In this episode of Talk to Al Jazeera, the influential streamer reflects on bias, accountability, wealth, bans and the blurred line between journalism and digital influence. As algorithms replace editors and engagement supplants verification, we examine who shapes political narratives in the age of streaming and what responsibilities accompany that power. Published On 15 Feb 202615 Feb 2026 Click here to share on social media share2 Share Source link

Leading voices in journalism, science, and culture join New Humanist Editorial Board – Humanists UK

Leading voices in journalism, science, and culture join New Humanist Editorial Board – Humanists UK

Ian Dunt is a prominent voice in British political journalism, known for his incisive commentary and bestselling books including Brexit: What the Hell Happens Now?, How To Be A Liberal, and How Westminster Works … and Why It Doesn’t. His experience as a columnist for the i and former Editor of politics.co.uk – alongside his regular appearances as a political commentator on TV, radio, and podcasts – have made him a popular national commentator for many liberals and humanists. Samira Ahmed is an award-winning journalist, writer, and broadcaster (also a columnist) who presents Front Row on Radio 4, Newswatch on BBC1, and co-presents the vintage TV podcast Through The Square Window. Her BFI Film Classics book on the first Beatles’ film A Hard Day’s Night will be published by Bloomsbury in April 2026. Jim Al-Khalili is a quantum physicist and vice president of Humanists UK. He is currently Distinguished Emeritus Professor of physics at the University of Surrey as well as a science communicator known for his many popular science books, TV documentaries, and radio …

How ‘The Washington Post’ Cultivated a Bespoke Concept of Sports Coverage

How ‘The Washington Post’ Cultivated a Bespoke Concept of Sports Coverage

Josh Barr arrived at the Washington Post sports section in October of 1995, just shy of his 23rd birthday. Surrounded by veteran journalists who would show him the ropes, he recalled this week, “I learned how to show up”—how to cover football practices, as explained by reporters who understood it as second nature. Barr likened the paper’s sports columnists to Brazilian soccer stars, known only by mononyms: Boz, as in the longtime baseball columnist Thomas Boswell, or Sally, as in the Pulitzer Prize finalist Sally Jenkins. Tony Kornheiser and Michael Wilbon, the stalwart hosts of the ESPN sports debate show Pardon the Interruption, who each did long stints on the Post’s sports desk, didn’t know at the time that they were previewing their future careers for Barr. “What they did on TV,” Barr said, “they did in the office.” Such memories flowed freely this week on social media and in mournful first-person essays. Most of the ire around the mass layoffs at the Post centered on its publisher and its owner, Will Lewis and Jeff …

Sky News nominated for nine Royal Television Society TV journalism awards | UK News

Sky News nominated for nine Royal Television Society TV journalism awards | UK News

Sky News has been nominated for nine Royal Television Society TV journalism awards, including for news channel of the year. A number of Sky News journalists have been acknowledged for outstanding work in their field, including Yalda Hakim, who hosts the international news show, The World With Yalda Hakim, and has been recognised in the network presenter of the year category. Special correspondent Alex Crawford and Africa correspondent Yousra Elbagir take two of the three slots in the network television journalist of the year group, You need javascript enabled to view this content Enable javascript to share Share Inside Libya’s migrant detention centres Crawford, who travels the world covering major stories, often from war zones, reported from countries including Syria, Libya and Somalia in 2025. She stars in our Hotspots series, which takes viewers straight into some of the world’s most hostile environments. Elbagir has reported extensively on the war in Sudan, including an investigation into the “killing fields” where thousands have been targeted. You need javascript enabled to view this content Enable javascript to …