An autopsy for AI: lessons for journalism from the platform era

An autopsy for AI: lessons for journalism from the platform era


Data

Ven 17 aprile 2026

Ora inizio

15:00

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Gratuito

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For nearly two decades, journalism’s future was shaped as much inside technology companies as in newsrooms as platforms promised distribution, scale, and sustainability in exchange for content and referral traffic. Some of those bets worked. Many didn’t. Newsrooms restructured themselves around metrics, algorithms, and monetization models they didn’t control and are still living with the consequences. Now AI is influencing how news is produced, distributed, and discovered in news ways even as it raises many similar questions about how to adapt.
This panel brings together senior tech executives who worked directly at the intersection of platforms and journalism to offer a, unusually frank reckoning with what went wrong, what genuinely worked, and why those choices matter for the public. The discussion looks ahead, asking what lessons from the social media age should guide journalism now? What opportunities were missed that we can take advantage of today? What are the risks and benefits to new publisher partnerships and deals with tech firms? Which experiments genuinely improved access to information, safety, or sustainability, and which quietly hollowed them out? What warning signs should we watch for? And how can this next wave of technology support rather than undermine a healthy, trustworthy news ecosystem?
We need a clearer understanding of how incentives - not intentions – have shaped journalism. This conversation offers a rare, candid chance to learn directly from those who helped build the last generation of information infrastructure before the next one fully locks in. The goal is not nostalgia or blame, but clarity: what went wrong, what went right, and what journalists, editors, publishers, and policymakers should insist on this time around.
Moderated by Courtney Radsch.
Organised in association with Center for Journalism and Liberty, Open Markets Institute.


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Pagine coinvolte
Madhav Chinnappa
Madhav Chinnappa

Madhav Chinnappa is a senior executive consultant who has worked at the intersection of news, technology, AI and sustainability globally for more than two decades in both the commercial and public service sectors. He has extensive experience with journalism funding and sustainability having launched the DNI Fund, the GNI Innovation Challenge programme and the Journalism Emergency Relief Fund while at Google. He has worked in the news industry since 1994 - first in the launch team of Associated Press Television (APTV), a year in M&A at United News & Media and spent over nine years at BBC News, latterly as Head of Development & Rights. He is currently leading a thought leadership event series around AI and news for the Thomson Foundation.

Colin Crowell
Colin Crowell

Colin Crowell is the Global Managing Director of The Blue Owl Group. Colin is an international tech policy consultant and the former Vice President of Global Public Policy at Twitter. During his 8+ years at Twitter, Colin engaged with global policymakers and civil society on a range of Internet policy issues. Prior to joining Twitter, Colin worked as Senior Counselor to the Chairman of the Federal Communications Commission and previously spent more than two decades on Capitol Hill drafting telecommunications and Internet laws on the committee staff of then-U.S. Representative (now Senator) Ed Markey (D-MA). Colin was the 2020 Commencement Speaker at the LBJ School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas - Austin. He is a graduate of Boston College with a BA in Political Science and a minor concentration in Computer Science. After college, Colin was a Jesuit International Volunteer in Arequipa, Peru.

Courtney Radsch
Courtney Radsch

Courtney C. Radsch is a journalist, author and scholar who writes and speaks about the way technology impacts journalism. She is the Director of the Center for Journalism and Liberty at the Open Markets Institute where she produces and oversees cutting-edge research into news media market structures and helps design smart policy solutions to protect and bolster journalism’s financial and editorial independence. Her current research focuses on AI governance, technology policy, and the future of journalism and she advises policymakers and publishers around the world on issues like news media bargaining codes, generative AI and disinformation. Radsch is the author of Cyberactivism and Citizen Journalism in Egypt: Digital Dissidence and Political Change (Palgrave-Macmillan, 2016) and has published in top media outlets including The New York Times, Forbes, The Guardian, Newsweek, Al Jazeera, the Columbia Journalism Review, and Project Syndicate, among others, as well as peer-reviewed an...

Nick Wrenn
Nick Wrenn

Nick Wrenn is an independent consultant with more than three decades of experience working in news and technology. His career includes eight years at Facebook/Meta working closely with news organisations as Head of News Partnerships EMEA. Nick also has held executive roles at CNN, CNBC and the BBC. He began his career as a local newspaper reporter and has also worked for the UK Press Association and Reuters.

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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