Newsroom Robots copertina

Newsroom Robots

Newsroom Robots

Di: Nikita Roy
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A proposito di questo titolo

Looking to explore the intersection of AI and journalism? Influential thought leaders in the industry join data scientist and media entrepreneur, Nikita Roy, each week to explore what's next with AI and its implications for the media landscape. In each episode, industry experts discuss how automated newsrooms have the potential to change journalism and uncover opportunities to optimize workflows and increase efficiency without compromising journalistic integrity.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Nikita Roy
Economia Politica e governo
  • Alessandro Alviani & Fabian Heckenberger: How Germany’s Süddeutsche Zeitung is building AI products that audience can trust
    Jan 10 2026

    By 2026, most leading newsrooms have moved past the question of whether AI belongs in their organization. Now the key question is: what does a sustainable AI product strategy look like when you’re building for a subscription-based business and a high-trust brand?



    This week on Newsroom Robots, host, Nikita Roy sits down with Alessandro Alviani, Lead for Generative AI, and Fabian Heckenberger, Managing Editor for AI, at Germany’s Süddeutsche Zeitung to discuss how they’re using AI to build the next generation of news products.

    This conversation looks at what happens when AI becomes a permanent layer in a newsroom’s product stack.



    Alessandro and Fabian walk through how they’re designing AI experiences that fit naturally with reader behavior and how they’re developing new distribution and accessibility formats that would have been impossible to sustain manually.



    This episode also goes deep on a topic that’s becoming a defining competency which is operational trust. What do you monitor once an AI product is live? How do you categorize failures? And how do you respond quickly when something goes wrong, without panic and without eroding your brand?



    This episode, we cover:



    02:52 — How editorial and product roles complement each other in AI strategy



    13:13 — Addressing skepticism and fear around AI in the newsroom



    25:17 — Inside building the German election chatbot



    31:10 — The design framework that signals AI content without eroding trust



    35:30 — Real-time risk management and monitoring for live AI tools



    48:50 — The two questions every newsroom should ask before greenlighting an AI project



    54:55 — Closing reflections and personal AI use



    Sign up for the Newsroom Robots newsletter for episode summaries and insights from host Nikita Roy.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    1 ora
  • Francesco Marconi & Scott Austin: 2025 Year in Review, What Actually Changed in AI and Media
    Jan 1 2026

    2025 wasn’t just another year of AI experimentation in the media industry. It forced the industry to confront a bigger question: what happens when AI stops being just a newsroom tool and becomes the layer audiences experience journalism through? That is the core question heading into 2026.



    This week on Newsroom Robots, host Nikita Roy sits down with Francesco Marconi and Scott Austin for an end of year recap roundtable on what actually changed in AI and media in 2025 and what newsroom leaders need to prepare for heading into 2026.



    Francesco is the co-founder and CEO of AppliedXL. He previously led R&D at The Wall Street Journal and built some of the earliest AI and newsroom automation systems at The Associated Press.



    Scott leads business development at Symbolic.ai, an AI assisted publishing tool. He is also a journalist and digital media veteran who spent years at The Wall Street Journal as a reporter and award winning editor, and later led content partnerships at Dow Jones across major platforms.



    This episode covers:


    03:10 — Why 2025 was journalism’s operational reckoning year



    08:55 — The shift from search to answers and why it breaks old business models



    14:40 — Proactive AI and what ChatGPT Pulse reveals about the next distribution layer



    20:30 — Journalism’s hidden work and why persistence, source building, and human judgment still matter



    23:30 — Why news orgs must move upstream from content to structured knowledge



    36:10 — AI agents: what they actually are, what they are not, and why transparency matters



    41:20 — The overlooked shift: Model Context Protocol (MCP) and why it is a major newsroom disruption



    51:05 — Predictions for 2026



    Sign up for the Newsroom Robots newsletter for episode summaries and insights from host Nikita Roy.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    1 ora e 12 min
  • Jim Friedlich, David Chivers & Matt Boggie: How the Lenfest AI Collaborative placed AI engineers in 10 newsrooms
    Dec 19 2025


    The Philadelphia Inquirer never had an AI engineer on staff until the Lenfest AI Collaborative & Fellowship program changed that.



    The collaborative is a $5 million partnership between the Lenfest Institute, OpenAI, and Microsoft that placed 10 AI fellows in American newsrooms for two years. These engineers work within the organizations, building tools that solve real newsroom problems.



    This week on Newsroom Robots, host Nikita Roy sits down with Jim Friedlich, CEO and Executive Director of the Lenfest Institute, David Chivers, lead advisor to the Lenfest AI Collaborative and Matt Boggie, CTO of The Philadelphia Inquirer, to walk through how the program works and what the Inquirer has built as a result.



    The Inquirer came to the collaborative with an idea to build a full-archive search tool that would let reporters query decades of journalism. They expected it to take 24 months. Within two weeks of a Microsoft hackathon, they had working code. The tool, now called Dewey, searches everything the Inquirer has published since 1978.



    This episode covers:



    03:02 — How the Lenfest AI Collaborative got started



    05:34 — Can newsrooms trust big tech partners?



    08:33 — How the fellowship works day to day



    14:52– Inside the Microsoft hackathon that built Dewey in two weeks



    21:37 — Training journalists to understand LLM limitations



    24:07 — How AI literacy has changed newsroom culture



    29:45 – How small newsrooms can get started with AI



    35:14 — AI answers, search decline, and the future of audience traffic



    38:15 — Rethinking journalism’s role in an AI-mediated world



    41:23 — Closing reflections and personal AI use



    This episode of Newsroom Robots is supported by the Lenfest Institute for Journalism.



    Sign up for the Newsroom Robots newsletter for episode summaries and insights from host Nikita Roy.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    47 min
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