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Columbia Journalism Review
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CJR is a journalism trade publication with occasional relevance to AI safety topics through its coverage of AI in newsrooms and media governance; it is not primarily an AI safety resource.
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Summary
The Columbia Journalism Review (CJR) is a leading media criticism and journalism industry publication covering press freedom, journalistic standards, and the intersection of technology and news. It includes coverage of AI's role in newsrooms, press freedom threats, and the challenges journalists face in politically volatile environments.
Key Points
- •Covers how journalists and newsrooms can responsibly adopt AI tools without sacrificing quality or editorial oversight
- •Reports on press freedom threats, including journalist detentions, ICE stonewalling reporters, and covering autocratic environments
- •Examines the media's relationship with political power, including survival guides for reporting under hostile administrations
- •Addresses prediction markets and emerging information tools relevant to journalism and public knowledge
- •Provides industry analysis on local news decline and structural challenges facing the press
Cited by 1 page
| Page | Type | Quality |
|---|---|---|
| AI Risk Public Education | Approach | 51.0 |
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Columbia Journalism Review
Special Issue
Recipe Book
What the crisis for press freedom in Gaza portends.
By
Atossa Araxia Abrahamian
Podcast
Lessons from an Early-Career Journalist
“I wouldn’t be getting this experience at a national publication, to be extensively following the hottest news story in the country.”
By
Megan Greenwell
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Cinematrix Is a Blockbuster
Inside New York ’s addictive movie trivia game.
By
Amos Barshad
ProPublica ’s Payoff
Plus, why we should let Trump go to voicemail, and great work from Charleston’s Post and Courier .
By
Susie Banikarim
How Journalists Can Make AI Work for Them
A framework for newsrooms to use AI in ways that don’t sacrifice quality or lessen oversight.
By
Stephen J. Adler
Recent
See all recent
Are Prediction Markets Actually Good for Journalism?
Dustin Gouker, the author of a Substack about prediction markets, says the media could benefit from keeping an eye on Kalshi and Polymarket.
By
Ivan L. Nagy
Estefany Rodríguez in Limbo
Last week, a reporter in Nashville was detained by ICE. Officials claimed to have paperwork for her arrest, but her lawyers say it was warrantless—and retaliation for her reporting.
By
Carolina Abbott Galvão
On Standing Rock, Local News Is Teetering
“We are like living ghosts,” the editor of the Teton Times said.
By
Liam Scott
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Politics
Survival Guide
How to keep your head above water as Trump floods the zone.
The Letter of the Law, and the Law in Practice
By Megan Greenwell
The NPR and Colorado Stations That Took Trump to Court
By Lucy Schiller
Nothing Is Secure
By Maddy Crowell
The Case for Unbordered Reporting
By Jean Guerrero
No, Seth Harp Didn’t Dox a Delta Force Commander
By Carolina Abbott Galvão
S.V. Dáte Thinks the White House Press Corps Should Hand In Their Badges, Too
By Ivan L. Nagy
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