After the reader: what comes next for news in an AI-first world?

After the reader: what comes next for news in an AI-first world?


Data

Sab 18 aprile 2026

Ora inizio

12:30

Ingresso

Gratuito

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The economic and distribution model that defined the Google era of journalism—crawl, rank, click, read—is under sustained pressure. AI systems now ingest news at scale but increasingly deliver substitutional answers, reducing traffic to publisher sites. Advertising revenue continues to decline, subscription growth has plateaued for most news organizations, and younger audiences show limited willingness to pay for news they already encounter via social platforms or AI interfaces.
This panel starts from a difficult premise: what if the future of news is no longer primarily a reader-driven business?
Rather than focusing only on licensing disputes or compensation from Big Tech, the discussion will examine how some news organizations are beginning to experiment with new product and service models built on journalistic expertise and trusted data. These include forms of real-time intelligence and analysis, educational and tutoring tools, culturally and context-rich guides, domain-specific assistants, and direct integrations into AI systems as structured, permissioned providers of verified knowledge.
Drawing historical parallels—from Bloomberg’s terminal to other non-consumer-first media businesses—the panel asks whether the next generation of sustainable news organisations may increasingly resemble infrastructure or service providers rather than traditional publishers. What would such a shift mean for editorial priorities, newsroom skills, ethics, and public-interest reporting?
The session will conclude by addressing the risks of this transition: continued dependence on dominant AI platforms, the loss of direct audience relationships, and the tension between commercial product development and journalism’s civic role.
Key questions explored:
> If “the reader” is no longer the primary customer, who is?
> What kinds of products are news organisations well positioned to build?
> Which current experiments show promise—and which risk becoming distractions?
> How can news organisations retain independence and public trust in an AI-mediated ecosystem?
Moderated by David Caswell.


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Pagine coinvolte
David Caswell
David Caswell

David Caswell is the founder of StoryFlow Ltd., an innovation consultancy focused on AI workflows in news production. He was formerly an Executive Product Manager at BBC News Labs, focused on AI-based new product initiatives. He has previously led product management for data and machine learning at Tribune Publishing in Los Angeles and was the Director of Product Management for Content Understanding at Yahoo!. He holds an MBA from the Anderson School at UCLA and began his career as a software developer and architect. Caswell has also researched and published extensively on computational, structured and automated forms of journalism, including as a Fellow at the Reynolds Journalism Institute at the Missouri School of Journalism. A list of his peer-reviewed publications can be found here. He is a frequent speaker and writer about both strategic and applied opportunities and challenges for re-inventing news workflows and products for the emerging AI-mediated digital media ecosystem.

Florent Daudens
Florent Daudens

Florent Daudens is the co-founder of Mizal AI, and a recognized voice on how AI is reshaping media, with expertise spanning technology, content, and leadership. He previously led AI and media innovation at Hugging Face, where he fostered a global journalist community around open source, and consulted with international news organizations. Before diving into tech, Florent spent many years as a journalist and newsroom leader: Managing Editor at Le Devoir, and later head of international, political, and newsgathering teams at CBC/Radio-Canada. He has been featured as an expert in international publications and is regularly invited to speak at industry events and lead workshops at major universities.

Shuwei Fang
Shuwei Fang

Shuwei Fang is Associate Director of Media and Disinformation at Open Society Foundations, working globally to advance open society values at the intersection of media and technology using grants, hybrid investments, and other strategies. Outside of Open Society, she was founder of two gaming startups and worked as an investment banker in Technology, Media and Telecoms.

Lucky Gunasekara
Lucky Gunasekara

Lucky Gunasekara is a media technologist and founder working at the intersection of news, artificial intelligence, and open digital infrastructure. He leads Miso.ai, an AI media lab partnering with more than 50 publishers globally to explore how the shift toward “liquid media” — adaptive, modular, and machine-readable content — is transforming the engagement, distribution, and revenue models of news. Through this work, he examines how existing media value chains are being eroded by extractive and opaque uses of AI, and how they might be rebuilt in the public interest. His current focus is on how autonomous agents, open-source models, and interoperable web standards could enable new forms of media products, sustainable economics, and institutional resilience in an increasingly agentic media ecosystem.

Festival Internazionale del Giornalismo
Festival Internazionale del Giornalismo

Il Festival Internazionale del Giornalismo di Perugia è un evento annuale che riunisce professionisti dei media, esperti di comunicazione e appassionati di informazione da tutto il mondo. Si svolge nel centro storico di Perugia e offre conferenze, dibattiti, workshop e opportunità di networking sui temi più rilevanti del giornalismo contemporaneo.

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