Tech Won't Save Us - Google and Meta Are A Threat to Journalism w/ Matt Pearce
Episode Date: September 12, 2024Paris Marx is joined by Matt Pearce to discuss how Google sidestepped two California bills aimed at funding journalism and how major tech companies are transforming the web to make hyperlinks less rel...evant.Matt Pearce is the President of Media Guild of the West and a former reporter at the Los Angeles Times.Tech Won’t Save Us offers a critical perspective on tech, its worldview, and wider society with the goal of inspiring people to demand better tech and a better world. Support the show on Patreon.The podcast is made in partnership with The Nation. Production is by Eric Wickham. Transcripts are by Brigitte Pawliw-Fry.Also mentioned in this episode:Matt wrote about the disingenuous arguments against the California Journalism Preservation Act and the changing nature of hyperlinks online.Google sidestepped the two California bills to carve out a separate deal that includes funding for an AI initiative.When you compare per capita public broadcast funding across wealthy nations, Canada is near the bottom, but the United States is barely on the chart.Google will distribute $100 million to news publishers in Canada after a bargaining process there.Digital media companies have been doing layoffs and shutting down in droves.The New York Times used AI to assist in identifying the deadly weapons Israel is using against the people of Gaza.The Media Ecosystem Observatory looked at the effects of Meta's news ban on its platforms in Canada.Support the show
Transcript
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It's so crazy because the people who are getting the most exploited by these platforms are the ones coming along and telling the legislature like, oh my God, please protect our predator.
Hello and welcome to Tech Won't Save Us, made in partnership with The Nation magazine.
I'm your host, Paris Marks, and this week my guest is Matt Pierce.
Matt is the president of Media Guild of the West and a former Los Angeles Times reporter.
Matt and I have been talking for a while about having him on the show to talk about a couple bills that had been proposed in California that were designed like some bills
in Canada and Australia to get these major tech companies, in particular Google and Meta, to start
paying some money to journalism as, you know, we've continued to see the struggles that the
media industry has faced over the past number of years and the major layoffs of journalists that
have been happening. And, you know, the broader recognition that that has some really significant impacts, not just on our ability to know what is happening in our communities,
but I think that we generally associate a healthy media with a healthy democracy.
And so if we don't have a healthy media industry and journalists who are able to do great
investigative journalism and local journalism, then, you know, our democracies start to suffer
from that as well.
Now, that's not so much the discussion that I have with Matt, because I wanted to talk to him about these bills and how ultimately Google was able to influence this process to sideline them
and to put in its own process that is much worse than what was ultimately being proposed in the
Senate and Assembly bills in California. But then I also wanted to talk to him
about some bigger picture issues, right?
What he sees as being the ultimate problems
that journalism is facing
and whether tech is at the root of that.
You won't be surprised to hear his answer, I think.
But also how he is seeing the internet itself evolve
and how we often have this discussion
about how hyperlinks are so key
to what is happening online,
but how these platforms are really changing that expectation and changing the way that we consume
information online so that the idea of linking to these various pieces of information is not so much
how the internet is working anymore because there is such a huge focus on getting us to spend so
much time within the fiefs or the platforms
of these dominant tech companies. And at a certain point, we need to have the discussion as to what
the ultimate impacts of that, right? Because that is really what we're seeing happen here.
There's this ideal image of what the internet should be and could be and maybe was at one time.
And then this reality of what the internet has become and is increasingly becoming
as these companies continue to shape it for their interests. So that's just to say, I think that
this was a great conversation with Matt. We got into some really important issues that are not
going away and that I'm sure that we're going to be talking about for some time to come. So if you
do like this conversation, make sure to leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of
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And if you do want to support the work that goes into making the show every single week,
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by going to patreon.com slash techwontsaveus where you can become a supporter as well. Thanks so much and enjoy this week's conversation.
Matt, welcome to Tech Won't Save Us.
It's good to be here and tech indeed won't save us.
A lot of people can relate to the title of the show. I think, you know, I've been kind of familiar
with your work for a while since you were at the LA Times. And now of course, as a president of
Media Guild of the West, I was interested in talking to you because there was this discussion in California around
bringing forward some of these bills that were going to get the tech companies to
provide some funding to journalism, to publishers, not dissimilar to what we've
seen in Canada and Australia. I was wondering to start, could you talk to us a bit about what
those bills were and what the California legislature was proposing for what this was going to look like? legislation. Some people call it bargaining code legislation. Other people call it like a link tax
legislation. Basically what it is, is collective bargaining for news publishers against Meta and
Google. Those are the huge advertising monopolies that both distribute a lot of journalism and
profit from journalism through the digital advertising networks that power those platforms.
And so the basic concept of this kind
of legislation is that if we're going to be stuck with these gigantic monopolies that are going to
have control over how our journalism is not just distributed, but profited from, there should be
some kind of mechanism to return some of those monopoly profits to the newsrooms that are making
the journalism. And we got interested in this legislation because there
were rumblings that it was going to emerge in California as well, which would be the first
state level attempt at this kind of legislation that's part of a much larger global fight between
news publishers and Google and Meta. And also it's important because California as the nation's
largest and wealthiest state often sets the framework for the rest of the nation for
how governments are going to regulate large companies. The other thing that really interested
us about this framework is that we could see that not only there were these really bad declines in
traditional newsrooms like newspapers, which obviously they're going off a cliff like this,
people aren't reading the print edition anymore. Stuff's moving online. But you can also see in recent years, the collapse
of a lot of digital media that was supposed to be the future. So stuff like BuzzFeed News,
stuff like Vice News, these really creative digital news outlets that were filled with a
lot of talented people trying new stuff, doing journalism in a different way. In recent years,
you've watched those news outlets implode spectacularly as well. And there are a lot of reasons for that.
Venture capital was involved and there were some overly high expectations in a lot of those places
and specifically like the Messenger, which was the Jimmy Finkelstein place that imploded
pretty badly recently. But one thing that they had in common, the one thing that newspapers have in
common, the one thing that public media have in common, the one thing that digital media have in
common is that all of them are struggling to find a way to even just exist digitally. And so for me,
it's an ecosystem problem that touches on all forms of content production. I mean, I'm not
even somebody who uses the word content because I'm a journalist. I make journalism. Journalists make journalism. But it's something that we have
in common with musicians and Hollywood creatives, which is that more and more of our work is getting
shoved onto platforms that we don't even negotiate with, we don't have bargaining power with,
which are certainly getting extremely wealthy off of the stuff that we're producing
for mass audiences.
So this legislation was a first bite at the apple at state level in the US,
and we got involved in that fight. So along for pushing for that legislation in California,
and that was called the California Journalism Preservation Act, Assembly Bill 886, sponsored by Assemblymember Buffy Wicks. There was a separate riff on this idea that emerged over the legislative
session. And it was a data mining tax sponsored by Senator Steve Klaeser. And both of these
sponsors are Democrats. And the data mining tax argued something slightly different, which is that
these platform companies, Google Meta and Amazon, which is becoming an increasingly large force in
digital advertising, there's a barter
that happens when you're going on their services. When you're using Instagram, you're trading away
your private information to Mark Zuckerberg so that he can, in a more sophisticated way,
sell t-shirts to you. So that barter, you can tax as an exchange. And if you hook it up to
Meta's advertising profits, you can tax that and use that to fund basically anything
the way that you would if you were a government taxing anything and putting money into the general
fund. So Glazer's idea was that we'll tax the data mining of these companies, this exchange
that happens between consumers and these platforms. And he compared it to mining,
basically. It's like when you have coal mining or gold mining or something like that, there's all these like negative environmental effects that it has. And so he proposed it as
a mitigation that data mining has all these negative social effects that the platforms that
it powers have these negative social effects. And we're going to use this tax to try to offset some
of those negative social effects. In this case, he tied it to a journalist
employment tax credit, and also some funding for the education system in California. And so that
bill proposed taxing Google and Meta and Amazon to a billion dollars a year, with about half of that
$500 million set aside for journalist employment tax credits. The idea being that on a macro level,
you would subsidize employment for journalists.
So there's no reason just like handing money to companies if they're not producing journalism
in the name of journalism. So that was the concept. So obviously for us, we're a union
of journalists. Both of these things made sense to us. And so we signed up to support both bills.
And either one, if they had passed, would have been the single most ambitious piece of local journalism support to pass in the US since the creation of the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting. And this is not a country that, relative to other democracies
around the world, has public investment in journalism on nearly the same scale as places
like the UK, Canada, with like the CBC and the BBC, other Nordic countries, Europe,
this would be one way of doing it, kind of directing it through the platforms and putting
the platforms on the hook for funding journals. Yeah, it's really interesting to hear you describe
that because on the one hand, like up here in Canada, which is obviously where I am, we're like
public journalism is not funded nearly as much as like the UK or Norway or somewhere like that,
right? But I guess looking from the United States, it's still a lot more than what is provided on a per
capita basis. It's so fascinating to me because I have friends in Canadian media, and they're
really like frustrated with like the Canadian media environment. And I'm looking up there,
and I'm just like, Oh, my God, we don't have anything that's like the CBC. So California and
Canada have similar populations. But the CBC, I think the
News Guild CWA represents something like 4,000 journalists and media workers in Canada for the
CBC alone. And I'm like, imagine if California had a public option for news that employed 4,000
journalists and media workers running around every corner of the state.
You could practically double the amount of news production that's happening in California
if we had what Canada has, a country with the same population, but half the GDP.
And Canada's trying all sorts of other stuff. They've tried this bargaining code legislation.
There's some media subsidies too. So it's really funny because Canadian media also suffers from a
lot of the same problems of corporate consolidation and corporate predation. But at the same time,
you see a much more active government trying to create ambitious media policy. And at the same
time, it's not nearly as ambitious as what countries in Europe are trying to accomplish.
So it's really funny how far behind the United States is when we're having these conversations.
Yeah, it's so fascinating to have that like comparison across jurisdictions.
I was interested when you were talking about those two bills, like obviously the bargaining
one that you're talking about, the California Journalism Preservation Act is quite similar
to what we've seen in Canada and Australia with its kind of variations.
And I remember when those bills in Australia and Canada were being proposed,
there were people who were saying it'd be so much better just to tax digital advertising,
put it into a fund and give that to journalists or publishers or whatever that way.
Did you have a preference between these two bills and like the kind of model to set up?
And when you were looking abroad and comparing what was happening in California to what had happened in Canada and Australia, was there much difference in kind of the structure of this bargaining process that
California was trying to set up? Yeah, that's a really great question,
because that's one of the challenging parts of actually trying to turn media policy into a
reality. I've seen a lot of people say, oh, my God, this bargaining code stuff, it's really
confrontational. Google and Meta, you know, they're just going to threaten to pull out
of your country, which is something that Meta has done in Canada. And both of them have threatened
in Australia and Canada and also the US, which is considering a type of this legislation at
the federal level. I mean, the thing is, a tax is just harder to pass politically in terms of
the politicians that you're dealing with. Like it's uglier to
pass a tax when you're a lawmaker and, you know, maybe you're in a vulnerable district
and you're seen as something like imposing costs. And it was really interesting in California to be
able to like try out the two different models of like accountability, anti-monopoly legislation
that people have been talking about, because we actually got to road test what something like an advertising tax would look like here. And it was harder. It was harder
because of the branding problem with having something called a tax. The other thing is that
like in the business lobby, they have a built in reflexive reaction to that kind of policy,
which is that they dragged in a bunch of small business owners who digitally advertise on Google
and Meta and said, Oh my god, if you tax the advertisements for Google and Meta, they're just going to pass on those advertisement costs to us.
And like, first of all, it was really funny is that there was a group of 150 small businesses in California that signed a letter saying like, oh, my God, don't tax big tech.
We're going to be the ones who bear the cost for it. Well, of course, they were organized by a big tech AstroTurf group.
Because what plumbing company is sitting there in Murrieta, California, thinking about how
badly big tech regulation is going to hurt them, right?
But the other thing is that I actually went and looked up each one of these businesses
on the Google and Meta advertising databases and found that most of them weren't actually
actively advertising on either one of these platforms.
So I'm like, sounds like an advertising tax, not going to be a problem for
you. But it was so strange, because on one hand, this was total bullshit at the sort of legislative
level. But when you're a lawmaker, and you're like, you're up for election, you're in a swing
district, and the Chamber of Commerce is saying that this is a job killer bill, despite the fact
that it would create like a million journalism jobs or something crazy.
You know, they're facing like brick and mortar small businesses coming at them saying that they're going to like destroy small business in their communities.
The other thing was that for me, it was a really, really interesting glance at who's also getting exploited by Google and Meta, because a couple of weeks before the legislation died, there was, of course, this
federal ruling saying that Google is in fact an unlawful monopoly and has engaged in monopoly
behavior to protect that monopoly. And so I'm looking at these small businesses that are getting
charged above market prices for advertising on Main Street, brick and mortar, the bike shop or
whatever is spending money,
sending money to Google so that they're like, Cannon Bike is going to be like the first hit
on like the 10 blue links or whatever's left of like Google search these days. And I'm like,
it's so crazy because the people who are getting the most exploited by these platforms are the
ones coming along and telling the legislature like, oh my God, please protect our predator
from, you know, hurting us more. And on one hand, I was kind of like, if my God, please protect our predator from hurting us more.
And on one hand, I was kind of like, if you're under the thrall of a monopoly and you're saying
that you're concerned that the monopoly is going to pass monopoly prices onto you, I guess that's
a pretty good argument. They just weren't phrasing it that way. And the other thing is they're like,
doesn't that sound fucking illegal? That was the other thing was absolutely crazy about this. So that
was the fight for like the digital ad tax that people keep on talking about, like, oh, we don't
like the bargaining code stuff. It's a link tax, it violates this fundamental precept of the
internet. And so we're like, okay, we'll also try this other thing. And then the other thing turns
out to have this whole other set of arguments against it that also sucked. But like on the
bargaining code stuff, the way that platforms fight it is that it's just collective bargaining. And so what happens in collective bargaining is
that sometimes the employer threatens a lockout. And like, that's what these companies do. It's
like threaten a capital strike against your country. If you're democratically elected
officials, like they want to regulate these companies. So they're like, we're going to ban
journalism in Canada from meta, which is what happened.
So Google made the same kind of threat here in California.
So did Meta.
But the thing about Google is that we have a federal judge sitting here saying that Google
has maintained an illegally monopoly marketplace that all of us are trapped on.
Like Google has been paying tens of billions of dollars to competitors
to ensure that they do not compete against Google in the market for general search, where it's like,
they have like, what, 90% of the market for general searches on search engine and more than
that for mobile. It's just, it's crazy. We're totally captured by Google. And so this illegal monopoly is threatening to ban our journalism from its
monopoly marketplace if we don't comply with its terms. And I'm sitting here thinking like,
doesn't that also sound fucking illegal? I felt like I was losing my mind here in the
closing weeks of the session where I'm like, we have these gigantic companies where it seems like
most people know that there's a huge problem gigantic companies where it seems like most people know
that there's a huge problem here. And it seems like they're doing things that feel like they
should be illegal and they're happening anyway. And our governor seems to be going along with it.
And ultimately, so did a lot of the publishers in our industry who decided to cave in the end
and take a really, really, really crappy backroom deal. It was a very sobering experience for me
as someone who's been a really strong advocate
for journalists and a strong advocate for unionization
and an advocate for our industry
thinking about all this stuff completely differently
to watch the people who should have been guided
by their own greed.
No one has more to gain from strong monopoly action
than shitty media companies.
And even in the end,
they couldn't pass the marshmallow test. They like took the easy money instead of like going for
the regulation. It was very unsettling for me. Yeah. It's so wild to hear that and to have kind
of watched it unfold more recently. And I'll ask you about that kind of capitulation in just a
minute. But before I do that, you were talking there about these local businesses who,
you know, the tech monopolies were able to get to come into the legislature and kind of argue for their position, basically, to say, you know, don't regulate us, don't make us have to charge
these taxes, don't, you know, make us have to pay any money toward journalism. I was interested
because in one of the pieces that you wrote, you talked about how there was deceptive arguing sometimes behind the scenes by people who were obviously getting money from these major tech
companies. And that was something I remember seeing up here in Canada as well, when we were
not just with the news bill, but also with this bill that we had that was regulating the streaming
industry, where you not only had a lot of disingenuous arguments being made that felt
like they were coming from the tech monopolies, but like not directly through the mouths of their spokespeople.
But then also, you know, experts who would be interviewed in media, experts who would be
talking about these bills, who were really repeating the talking points of the tech
companies, but like, you know, we're not officially attached to them. And I wonder if you saw much of
that happening down there as well in these processes. A hundred percent. And look, on a very crass level, I have to hand it to Google for
playing us like a guitar because like, it turns out that you can like purchase the friendliness
of the news industry for like not all that much money. The Google News Initiative, it's a sort of
philanthropic and kind of publisher support program that Google's
booted up. They'll give grants to small digital publishers. And sometimes those grants are only
like $20,000. But the thing is, is like when you're a small digital publisher, because you're
operating in Google's monopoly marketplace and like you can't really make good money existing
on the internet when you're trying to do hyper local news, like 20 grand, like that is a
lifeline. And so when you're that kind of starving publisher, yes, you'll take the money. And they
also will run like workshops to see if like, are you running a sort of sustainable business model?
Like here are things that you could be doing better. And the thing is, is like in the abstract,
purely in the abstract, none of that's bad. Like some of that's good. Like a lot of people do need
help running their businesses better. I mean, like one of the reasons you see so many journalists unionizing is in fact
there are a lot of people running the industry who are making some very bad decisions yes like
business people in the journalism industry need a lot of help and they also need some capital yeah
but the thing is is like that lifeline turned into a leash as soon as google started feeling
threatened by regulation. like very mysteriously appeared to be in lockstep with Google's positions on whether it came to
opposing the bill in its initial form or making specific demands about what type of media to
exclude to, in the end, rallying support for a backroom deal that was ultimately supported by
almost no one except Google and like Governor Newsom. It was something that made me very cynical
because in our industry, we spend a lot of time
talking about independence, whether it's independence from our sources and the subjects
that we're covering or independence from the government that we're supposed to be holding
accountable. But we've been utterly captured by these gigantic platforms in terms of the grants
that they give to small newsrooms. We've been captured by the messaging that they deploy
when they're fighting against regulation,
which gets really faithfully repeated by a lot of people.
We're captured in how we display our journalism to the public,
news outlets rearranging their websites
to make them more findable through SEO.
And they have captured the lawmakers
who would regulate the marketplace that we
operate in. And ultimately, they can fight off legislation and regulation with this combination
of control. It's very disillusioning to me because as journalists, we're on the opposite
side of the ecosystem. A labor union practically like the only entity in this whole like array of parties that can't get bought off by Google. Like there's no way for Google to like
give us money. So I don't think it's a surprise that in the end we were the ones yelling loudest
about how crappy this whole thing was. Yeah, no, it makes perfect sense. And speaking about that
backroom deal, can you fill us in a bit more about what happened there? So there were these two bills
that were being proposed. And then, you know, at the end of August, August 21st, I believe it was, all of a sudden
it was like they were off the table and this new agreement was there in place.
What is that and what happened?
So in the closing weeks of the latest latest session, it had become clear from what I can
tell that Governor Gavin Newsom, who hadn't said anything publicly about any of this,
that he was just not going to sign anything that Google didn't agree to. This was one of the things that was very
different from how things played out in Canada, where Prime Minister Justin Trudeau waged a pretty
public campaign in defense of Canadian media and against these American platforms that were
essentially crumpling the industry like a soda can. Yeah. I'll just say we saw a lot of that
in Australia as well,
even from their politicians too. Yeah, there were public officials that were standing up for the
news industry because they saw that this was predatory threats by monopolies. And I think
that's one of the things that makes this dynamic so different for the US is that I think other
countries can see a little bit more clearly like what's going on because they aren't American
companies that are doing the threatening. Like there is a little bit of like a nationalist component in there,
but we definitely didn't see anything like that from Governor Newsom standing up to,
you know, the blackout threats to like censored journalism in California. Didn't see anything
from Newsom about the need for monopolies to return some of their monopoly profits to the
industries that they're exploiting. Nothing like that. And so that basically drove
sponsor assembly member Buffy Wicks into negotiations with Google to see if there
could be some kind of settlement, maybe along the lines of what Canada ultimately agreed to.
And in Canada, that was a deal for $100 million Canadian every year to be distributed to a fund
to distribute among Canadian newsrooms.
So that would have been about like $75 million US. So that's for a country with a similar
population as California. But the deal that emerged from the backroom in California,
Google was only going to contribute $15 million in year one to a fund to distribute to California newsrooms, followed by $10 million a year
after that. So despite having very similar legislation, despite having a probably vastly
more valuable marketplace, California ended up with a vastly worse deal than the one that
Canada got. And a lot of people think Canada's deal was not nearly good enough.
Like there are a lot of concerns right now
that Canadian news outlets
are going to get a much diluted form of payout
ultimately from this Google settlement.
So there's a lot of people raising concerns
that even Google had pulled something over on the Canadians
after they waged a much tougher fight.
And so California just got totally steamrolled.
And there was this bizarre situation where the state and the sponsor and the publishers got totally flattened in these backroom negotiations. But they felt compelled to come out with this kind of like very flowery press release about how great it was and how this is going to help save media in California. And we were looking at this and we were very conscious of the international context
around this legislation. And we were very keenly aware of how badly we'd just gotten beaten. And
it was very surreal to see the same publishers, some of whom who had been defending Google,
and some of whom who had been criticizing Google and sort of embarking on this anti-monopoly
crusade in the first place. They're all saying, well, it's not as much money as we would like,
but it seems good, better than nothing. And so that became like the mantra is that like,
when you're starving, you'll take crumbs. And I'm sorry, but like, as a journalist,
if you're starving, crumbs are not going to fill you up. Like you need a meal and we need to like
go fight for a meal. Because I don't think 15 million bucks spread across California with some
state subsidies thrown in is going to reverse the
decline of journalism in California for anybody. I mean, at the Los Angeles Times, where I took a
buyout earlier this year, I think last year, the deficit at the LA Times alone was going to be
something like what $37 million or something. So if you chuck a couple million bucks at that whole
$35 million deficit next time, like I just negotiated the layoffs of 150 of my coworkers. Yeah,
that's really going to help me, man. So for those of us who have had to suffer through
the inaction of regulators and to live through the inability of the news industry to basically
fight off these monopolies, we're still going to be suffering the consequences of a really bad deal.
And that's why you're seeing journalists being the ones who are most roundly denouncing this deal. You know, there are a couple of things I
want to ask you about that. I feel like maybe for some people, they would think, okay, you know,
publishers are making this deal. This must be good for journalists, right? Assuming that the
journalists are kind of the same as the places that they work for. Can you kind of pull that
apart for us? So this is something that's complicated because we have like overlapping
interests as journalists
with publishers, but our interests aren't exactly the same. I mean, just as a basic principle,
like the decline of the newspaper industry in California, for example, the number of journalists
employed by newspapers has declined faster than the number of newspapers. So like the bottom line
is that like, whenever your workplace gets the cold, it's going to be the workers who get the
flu, you know, because the company will lay off journalists, but to do so in a way that makes it able to stay in
business. So if you're in that position, and you're looking at a subsidy where it's like,
well, maybe I'll get like 5 grand a journalist out of this deal or 10 grand a journalist out
of this deal in the upper ranges of what could be possible here. You know, if you're a publisher, you'll take 10 grand ahead over nothing, like, and that's not
no money at all. So like, I do acknowledge that. My real concern here, the reason that
we're pushing back much harder as journalists and as labor is that we're actually the ones here who
are used to fighting companies that are being stupid and used to fighting companies that are
holding all the cards.
And we know that you have to drive much harder to get a better deal.
And one of the real problems for accepting a settlement with crumbs is that you take away the incentives for publishers to continue driving for anti-monopoly action in the marketplace.
Because I just saw what happened when all the publishers teamed up and
said, okay, yeah, we'll take this little deal from Google in exchange for nothing.
The journalists are screaming their heads off. And the governor and the legislature were kind
of like, well, I guess we'll agree with the publishers instead of the journalists.
So that's one of the problems when you have dance partners who aren't willing to fight like they
need to when you're taking on a $2 trillion monopoly, you have to have some real backbone there. And it was only the
journalists who are used to fighting really hard against giant companies, ironically.
And like one of the things that's really distasteful about these kinds of fights is that
we're actually kind of aligned with a lot of the media companies that we spend the rest of our time
yelling at. The LA Times hasn't had a contract in a couple of years, like the journalists at the LA Times haven't gotten raises
in three years. Nonetheless, we're standing alongside the LA Times and the legislature
saying that like, yeah, actually, we need anti-monopoly action because we hate our stupid
employer right now. And we need raises. But at the same time, we can't bargain and strike for
money that our employer doesn't even have. And that's the basic premise of one of the reasons you see like labor standing next to employers that they're normally yelling at is that like, look, stealing is unions now for places like the news guild who will
bargain hard and strike for that money but we can't go on strike against google and that's
like one of the things that's crazy about this is that like this is like if the union had sent
its leadership into a backroom with the employer and it came back with this dog shit tentative
agreement where everyone would get like a 0.5% raise and you threw that
at the membership, like the membership would have just voted no and gone on a wildcat strike.
But we can't do that here because we don't have the right to collectively bargain with Google
and like do stuff to basically engage in industrial action with Google because they're
not our direct employer. Despite controlling our industry, we can't negotiate with this entity that essentially
directs what we do in a very macro sense. So yeah, I mean, the other thing is that when you
talk about money that small, it's going to be really hard to actually notice it in the newsroom.
And if it makes the employers less likely to fight for the real money and to fight for structural
change, then I have no reason to believe that we're not going to be facing more layoffs across
the entire industry next year. One of the things that's really concerning to
me actually is not just the continued decline of legacy media. And people have a lot of complicated
feelings about that. It's like US media is doing a bad job of covering the presidential election,
or they're doing a bad job of covering Gaza. Let's look to new media who can maybe cover these things
better in a way that engages people. There's some reports
coming out that like new digital media startups have plummeted over the last couple of years.
That's because the money isn't there. There's no business model. There is no marketplace for this,
even when you're doing innovator stuff, like the success stories are very few and far between in
the journalism industry. And a lot of times the success stories are funded by Google.
Yeah. When you talk about the deal there as well,
the backroom deal that was made between Google and the legislature and the publishers,
another piece of this is that there's a big AI component to it, which I'm sure is something that
a lot of journalists are not eager to see implemented into the newsroom and into their
industry. Oh, yeah. So as part of this backroom deal, separate from the
subsidy that would be paid to newsrooms, there is a proposal for a national AI accelerator that is
funded by Google. And I've read that OpenAI has also volunteered to donate some technology to it.
What this AI accelerator would do is not clear. One of the things that the term sheet said is that
the nonprofit or the entity that would host the AI accelerator will be One of the things that the term sheet said is that the nonprofit or the entity
that would host the AI accelerator will be governed by the people that donate to it.
So what it sounds like to me is that the illegal monopoly that already controls our industry
is going to have a new program to allow its technology to further wrap its tentacles around
how we do journalism so that it becomes even harder for us to extricate ourselves from a business model that isn't even legal. I have a lot of questions
about that. Look, we're journalists. We use technology every day and technology changes
the way that we report, allows us to connect with people. I mean, if you can use machine learning to
identify craters to see which US munitions have been used to bomb civilian targets in Gaza,
which is something that the New York Times did. Sign me up for that stuff. That's the kind of
journalism that can be really impactful and the technology can help. And we've done something
good in the world. And you've got these genius engineers at Google, some of whom are members
of the Alphabet Workers Union of the CWA, our kin. They're really great people. There is good
technology to be
had out of this. The problem is that we're setting up in such a way that it's not journalists who
are controlling its development. I think if you look at what like technology has done to journalism
over the last 10 years, it was journalists who figured out how to make Twitter work for them.
It was journalists who figured out how to be like really good on Instagram and TikTok. I know there's this argument about content creators versus journalists, but I'm like,
we're all in the same ecosystem. If you're performing the functions of a journalist,
you're a journalist. And some people are really good on different platforms.
But it's hard to imagine a scenario where Google is going to be the party that creates a more
humane, intelligent, responsive form of journalism when they just engaged in this spectacularly cynical spectacle as part of the democratic process.
Yeah, that's a really good point. And as you're talking about that, I think that leads us into some of these bigger questions about the industry and that journalism itself is facing, right, that I wanted to get to as part of this discussion. You know,
when you talk about this problem with journalism and the proper funding of journalism and what the
future of journalism is going to look like, do you think that the tech companies and the big tech
monopolies, you know, the Googles and Metas in particular, are chief to blame for the problems
that we've been seeing in journalism, you know, over the past couple decades in particular,
but becoming really acute in the past few years? Or do you think that, you know, is this part of like a broader ecosystem?
Or when you really like drill down into it, is it the tech companies at the core
that are causing these really fundamental and structural problems?
I mean, my feeling is that Google and Meta, they're just one or two problems of many in
the journalism industry. Like that is very clear to anyone who actually works in our business. If you got rid of the platforms tomorrow, that is not going to
change the editor-in-chief. That is not going to remove private equity's control of a lot of
local newsrooms. So it's obviously just one piece. The one thing I would just say, though,
is that by the nature of being tech monopolies, they are the one factor that touches practically
everybody. And so for that reason, I think they are the one factor that touches practically everybody. And so for that reason,
I think they are the one factor that we now need to make a more concerted push at figuring out
how to restrain or how to bring back some of the monopoly profits to the people who are getting
profited from or breaking them up. I do think that they have an overarching quality that the
other problems in the journalism industry don't have.
Because one of the things that you'll commonly hear as a guild, we're one of the ones who say this frequently,
is it was Wall Street that destroyed local news.
It was hedge funds.
It was private equity.
They bought up a bunch of local newsrooms, consolidated, laid people off, did mergers.
It was all fueled by debt.
All that stuff is totally true. The problem is, is like that stuff doesn't explain why so many of the public media stations in California have also been laying off
people too. Like that stuff doesn't explain why it's been so hard for small or even medium-sized
digital newsrooms to become sustainable. Like it's an important problem in our industry. And
that's why you have so many unions that have popped up over the last five years between the News Guild, the Writers Guild of America East, another excellent
union. But it lacks the sort of explanatory power for why we're seeing so many declines across so
many different types of media and types of ownership. Like even right now, some of the
success stories that we can look to, like 404 Media, that's from the folks who were formerly of Motherboard at Vice.
Brilliant, brilliant startup.
Journalist run.
You're seeing a lot of interest in journalist co-ops.
It is not an accident, I think, that some of the few success stories that we can see in digital media right now are very small startups that require almost no capitalization at all.
That, to me, I mean, it's great. And like
cooperization is one of the things that my local promotes. We just had a unit in Long Beach form
a journalist co-op, which is really cool. The problem is, it's like that stuff doesn't scale.
And like when you're looking at the problems at the scale of like Bureau of Labor Statistics,
you're talking about the loss of tens of thousands of local journalism jobs getting offset by like a handful of very small successful business models so i think there's a lot of dogma
in the journalism industry about what works and what doesn't work and in fact one of the things
that really concerns me is one of the few voices in these debates that specifically represents the
interests of journalists rather than the interests of publishers is that there is a vibrant policy space for figuring out how to do things to
sort of bring local news back to communities. But that policy space is dominated by publishers,
like the same publishers who have had a hand driving the industry in the ground,
who have laid off so many journalists. Also from the philanthropic sector, which has been
revving up its giving and has taken a lot of interest in how you can sort of build a more benevolent local news structure.
The problem is, is like from the journalist perspective, some of those proposals aren't very realistic.
Some of those like aren't even to fund things that are journalism at all.
Like there's a real class divide in newsrooms between journalists and executives and everybody else about the utility of artificial intelligence, the kind of work that we do. And I think those kinds of class divides have really come in sharp
relief for me in these legislative fights, just because I do think there are many places where
the interests of journalists and the interests of publishers diverge. Technology is one of those
big places because you look at something like artificial intelligence,
like, okay, if we can agree, and it's not even a given that we can agree that there's a monopoly
problem in the journalism industry, artificial intelligence, like that can look really tempting
to a publisher where it's like, well, if it's cheaper to get a license from OpenAI than to
hire another five journalists, then why don't we try experimenting with the OpenAI license?
Why don't we try summarizing public meetings instead of hiring a reporter to sit through
the school board when something may not happen?
That's something where the interests of journalists and publishers are not the same thing.
And I think that's a place where publishers will strike a deal with Monopoly if it offers
them that technology because it's easier and because it's cheaper.
And ultimately, a lot of the things that journalists
are demanding are expensive. Investigative journalism is fucking expensive. It's really
expensive to just sit on one story for six months that may not even pan out. And the best kind of
AI-assisted investigations, it's not going to be the stuff where you're producing five stories a
day. It's going to be your training models that have to pick through data and imagery to like look for war crimes. And so that's a place where the interests of
journalists and publishers really differ too. And that's one of the places where having a monopoly
problem, like there's less incentive from employers to deal with that than there are from the
journalists. Yeah. I think it's a really good point as well around the new startups versus the
kind of legacy organizations as well, right? Like I'm as excited as anybody to see the 404 medias and the aftermath. But also, it's like,
if you lose those institutions, there's something really important that's being lost there. Because
while the small news startups are important, they don't fully replace what's lost if you lose these
major newspapers, say the public broadcasters or these sorts of
things that really provide important coverage, important local news, and have a bit more power
to push back against the other powerful forces in society, I guess, if you can put it that way.
No, I mean, that's exactly the problem. And one of the things where I counterintuitively
defend medium and larger size news organizations is that there are some of the very few institutions out
there that have the legal, economic, and even ethical fortitude to push back against
vexatious litigation. So like when you're covering a billionaire who doesn't like what you're
printing about them, and that billionaire, like Elon Musk, could threaten litigation to just
destroy your entire news outlet. If you don't have media liability insurance, if you can't afford to hire an expert in First Amendment law or defamation law,
that is something that can very easily drive your news organization into the ground. And that's
something that we already see, I think, with independent journalists. I mean, here in Los
Angeles, some of the journalists who are doing the most aggressive coverage of local law enforcement
are independent journalists. And sometimes that's because traditional newsrooms just won't employ those kinds of journalists
who are doing that kind of aggressive coverage for a variety of reasons. But what that also means is
that those independent journalists are far more exposed when they're getting harassed by law
enforcement. We had one case here where someone was actually sued by the LA City attorney because
they published information. It was headshots of
LAPD officers that they had attained for a public information request. And so there are real
vulnerabilities to being small and independent in this current environment where part of the weapons
of protecting monopoly and part of the weapons of protecting wealth involve litigation, involve
these sort of political and legal ways of trying to smother journalism
that weren't something that like the founding fathers were thinking of when they were drafting
the First Amendment, you know? So there are a lot of different policy things that you could do to
try to mitigate against that stuff while preserving independent journalism, like anti-SLAPP statutes
and shield laws and things like that. And of course, we have to fight for those things too.
But like when it comes to the American tradition of every now and then holding the government accountable for how it
engages in war around the world, publishing WikiLeaks or doing investigations into war crimes,
performing the function of essentially monitoring the national security state,
sometimes you need a large news organization that will stand next to you when it comes time to face down and defy a subpoena from a federal judge. So that is not a popular
argument with people because a lot of times these are companies that we hate, but like across the
breadth of the historical record, like these companies that face a lot of criticism right now
do house a lot of talented journalists and do provide backup for them sometimes when it's
really important.
Yeah, no, I think it's a really good point, right? And of course, as they have less revenue,
it becomes harder to provide that protection, that defense of that journalism, which is why
it's so important to keep, you know, some of these institutions strong. But I did want to ask you
about another piece of this that you were writing about in that, that you kind of mentioned earlier,
there was some discussion of these bargaining codes as like a link tax, right? By particular
kinds of digital rights people who, you know, have certain ideas about how the internet works
and didn't want to see these sorts of codes move forward because of what it represented.
I always thought that that was kind of a deceptive argument. But in some of your writings,
you also talked about how we're seeing this kind of broader shift on the internet away from this reliance on hyperlinks because of the way these
tech monopolies are structuring how we use the internet itself. Can you talk to me a bit about
that and what the implications of it are for journalism in particular? Yeah, totally. I mean,
this is something that almost came to me as an epiphany when I was hearing some of the arguments from the tech community against this kind of bargaining code legislation.
It's like a link tax.
You're taxing links.
You're taxing information.
So that means you're sort of breaking this rule for how Gen X views the Internet.
I'm sorry, but some of this is very generational.
But I was kind of like, that's kind of interesting because I'm a millennial and I have
grown up on the internet and I've done most of my journalism digitally. And so I was thinking about
this. And there was this one study out of Canada about Meta's link ban in Canada that it kind of
turned on a light bulb for me about the really big picture of what's going on here. So Meta,
in response to one of these pieces of
legislation in Canada, banned journalism in Canada. So if you try to post a news story to,
you know, Instagram or whatever, you'll get this message saying like, sorry,
the government hates you. That's why we had to remove journalism from Canadian democracy.
That's effectively what it says. Yeah.
Yeah. You know, we can read between lines. And so some media academics did this study to sort of study what happened to engagement on Facebook before and after the meta Canadian link ban. And I love this study because it shows this like before and after effect of like, it looked at these political groups of like Facebook groups that were discussing Canadian politics. And these are the kind of places that are posting a lot of news, right? You know, whatever Trudeau is up to and,
you know, whatever people's mad about today. So before, you know, people are posting a lot of
links to, you know, Canadian news, LSEs groups, link ban comes down. They're not posting any of
these links anymore because Facebook has censored the news. So one of the amazing findings in that
study, which to me is just like, it's the little
gold nugget that is inside of all this, is that what the scholars found is that, okay, like the
amount of link sharing had dropped because meta had killed it. But people were just taking screenshots
of the journalism and posting it instead of posting the links. So they were still posting
the journalism in these Facebook groups. And in fact, links. So they were still posting the journalism
in these Facebook groups. And in fact, the study said they were engaging with it equally as much
from when they had the links posted in there. But now they were just the screenshots of the text of
the most important parts of the article. And people are still just bopping along on Facebook,
like discussing the news. They were just like, had been mildly inconvenienced by meta. And so that was like, oh, I get it now. Because what you're seeing across the breadth of the
platforms, practically all of them, not totally, but like, there is a real bias against hyperlinking
that has developed on platforms and apps over the last five years, in particular, it's something
that's kind of operating hand in
hand with the rise of algorithmic recommendations. But you see this on Elon Musk's version of
Twitter, where posts with hyperlinks are degraded. Facebook itself has decided to detach itself from
displaying a lot of links. That's why you get so much AI scum on Facebook these days. Instagram itself has always
been kind of hostile to linking TikTok as well. We have been departing for a while now, the internet
of hyperlinks. And so that was one of the things when I was kind of like looking at these arguments
from the tech community that like, oh, you know, hyperlinks are one of these building blocks of the
internet. And if you do this bargaining code thing, like meta is going to be incentivized to just
ban hyperlinks.
And I'm like looking at this and I'm like, that's where meta is already going.
They don't need a law.
The law just happened to bring Canada to where meta was going first.
Like, look around.
Like we're entering a post hyperlink internet that with artificial intelligence, like if they can figure out generative AI, and itover up and summarize all the information that's out there and place it right in front of you so that you never have to leave the portal.
And the thing that's brilliant about that is that you can just stick your ads next to it or have people pay to be featured in the summaries.
And then your monopoly engine has only gotten even stronger.
And that was a real epiphany to me because the arguments against one form of this legislation
was that like, oh my God, you'll destroy this fundamental way of how the information works.
And I'm like, dude, these companies are already destroying the fundamental way of how this
information works. Am I the only one who notices this? Because I'm like, I'm sitting here on my stupid phone. And I like can't find like journalism anymore,
because I can't figure out how to like get reliable news on Instagram in a timely way.
It's something that's been going on under the radar for a while. And I think it is something
that makes something like a tax or a data mining tax and advertising tax more attractive over time,
just because we're moving toward a post hyperlink internet. But like, it was really funny to me that
like some of the people who oppose this legislation were like, this is just going to incentivize
clickbait. And I'm like, I'm not clicking on anything anymore. Are you? That's just not how
people are like consuming things on the actually existing internet on my phone.
So that was one of the other things that really surprised me because I'm not somebody who comes from like very dogmatic, like internet policy circles and like internet sort of libertarian
policy. Like this is something that was sort of learning organically from the internet that I was
actually on. And I feel like I was looking at a different internet as the people that we were
arguing with, because I'm like, you're the experts, right? Like you're the people who are the internet policy experts,
but I feel like you're describing an internet that I don't use anymore. And I am almost 40.
Yeah. It's a real nostalgia, but also like, it's also a misunderstanding or like almost a
deceptive framing of what the legislation was because often these legislation would talk about
the facts that yes, there were links to news from Google and from Meta, but it was not actually saying we're
going to tax each one of those links individually. It's just like, you know, you benefit from the
fact that these news articles are on your website, you're running ads next to them,
some of that money should go back to journalism. But I think that that observation that you made
around, you know, the decline of the hyperlinks, it really feels like the ultimate extension or like the endpoint of this like platformization of the internet, right? Where, of course, you have the Amazons and the Facebooks and all this kind of stuff that want everything to happen on their platform and want us to be more engaged and be spending more time there and either looking at more ads and spending more money. And now we reach the point where it's like Facebook really doesn't want you to go anywhere else. It wants to control the
social media experience. Like you've said, and like you've written about all these social media
companies are trying to adapt to the TikTok algorithm and do something similar to make you
even more engaged. And Google, of course, is using this generative AI and has been making changes to
its search platform for years to further
discourage hyperlinking and just to make sure you can get the answer right there on Google
instead of going anywhere else.
So I think it makes total sense that we're seeing this, you know, as you're saying that
this idea of the hyperlink and that being central to the internet is really breaking
down because of these platforms.
No, and you'll see it everywhere once you start looking for it.
Even if you just think about TikTok and the way that some people will consume news on TikTok, which is that you'll
have influencers who are really good at TikTok and they're really good at communicating and
connecting over that medium. And like, to be honest, not everyone is good at that stuff.
And some people have a real talent for it. And I like really applaud them for it because they are
actually an important part of the ecosystem. But like, when you think about how they're presenting information, they are
voracious readers, like they will read the news, they will follow what's going on. And then they'll
sort of summarize and the sort of more easily digestible way for the platform. But you know,
sometimes they'll just be like the screenshot in the background, the person's like pointing and
like it's their floating head. And like, they're still getting your journalism out there to people, which is great.
And I should say that like
from a journalistic perspective
and somebody who's kind of like
on the opposite side of the ecosystem,
like that's actually how it's supposed to work.
Like when journalism works,
like just regular, not fancy,
just work a day journalism,
it very much depends on having an ecosystem around it
because you shouldn't have to be a subscriber to a local newspaper or whatever to benefit from what that newspaper publishes.
I was part of a team that covered the leaks of audio from L.A. City Council people saying some racist stuff and talking about redistricting behind closed doors.
And like you didn't have to be a reader of the L.A. Times to be impacted by what that journalism did in Los Angeles. You had public
officials resigning and there was a lot of reaction to it and a lot of reflection on like what LA is
these days. The thing is, it's like journalism isn't an exclusive club. Like the information
is supposed to be out there and like somebody else reads the story, they do their own riff on it.
Somebody else follows up on the reporting. It doesn't matter whether they're a radio station
or a TV station or if they're on TikTok or Instagram, or if they're just on Substack,
if they're live streaming, like they're talking about the work, they're getting people to engage
in what's going on. They're getting people to engage in politics and talk about holding their
elected officials responsible. So like when you have someone on TikTok pointing at your story
and saying how great it is, you're not getting any traffic from that, but you've done your job. And so the thing is, it's like we have this tech
ecosystem that is capable of doing really good things. It's really capable of informing a lot
of people very quickly about what's going on. It's capable of bringing a lot of quality
information to people.
But the thing is, the system's not designed to do that. You have people who are just hacking in all these workarounds. And so you see this on X, where people are just posting screenshots now
without adding the links to them because they want people to see the stuff. But if you add a
hyperlink to it so people can see the full story, Elon's
going to suppress it. And so that's one of those things where it's like, God, man, like we have
all these smart people who I know, like they mean really well and they're capable of so much and
they've built some like really cool stuff. And I just sit here wondering like, what would all this
look like if any of this was actually built for humans? Oh yeah. I feel you on that one.
Sometimes it's great. Other times it's like, what of this was actually built for humans? Oh, yeah, I feel you on that one. Sometimes it's great.
Other times it's like, what is going on here?
You know?
No, I mean, like, this is why I think like, it's so important that like the alphabet workers
join the alphabet workers union, and that meta workers unionize and that like, there's
worker power inside of these companies, because I'm sitting here yelling at their boss.
And their boss is like crushing our industry under an iron
glove. And I'm just kind of like, there are some like freaking cool people who work at Google.
And I'm like, what kind of like news ecosystem would they build for us if they had their way?
Because I think it would be pretty cool. And I think this conversation would look totally different.
Yeah, no, I feel you on that. And just to clarify what I was saying as well, you know,
there are a lot of times I run into a product that seems really cool in theory, and then you try to
use it and you learn it's mainly made for people who know how to code. And it's like, come on,
like, please think about all the rest of us who are most of us. But to end off our conversation,
you know, I'd be remiss not to ask you a bit about generative AI, because that's what everyone's
talking about the past year and a half.
How do you see that impacting the journalism industry and journalists as we've been having these companies push it for the past year and a half, but also a lot of companies kind of making,
whether it's hiring decisions, investment decisions based on the hype around it,
and what kind of impacts that has? The thing is, is I think generative AI as it's
currently constituted is kind of a short-term phenomenon. And what I mean by that is that
there's a lot of hype around it. And if you go to like an everyday reporter, that reporter is
going to really be challenged to find something that's very, very applicable for what they're
doing. Because like the central requirement of the kind of work that we do is that we have to
be accurate, you know, and when we're doing our job well, we're doing original inquiry and reporting.
And those are two things that like fundamentally a large language model is just not constructed to
do. It's fancy text prediction. And so like when you're a reporter, you can't make predictions
because that's when you're really showing your ass. There are some like real fundamental
application problems for very basic,
even just like writing and journalism. You could see news employers try to cut copy desks for more
limited forms of generative AI. You could set them loose on trimming stories automatically or
checking for grammar. That's a more plausible use case, I think, for journalism and newsrooms that
could involve publishers trying to cut corners. The other sort of short-termism problem that I think generative AI has is that, like,
do we even know how much this stuff really costs? Because it seems as though a lot of it's operating
at a massive loss for companies like OpenAI. It's very energy intensive. It's really capital
intensive. You're starting to see publishers actually stick up for themselves and threaten litigation against these companies. So every aspect of production for generative AI, from employing the engineers to building data centers, to paying for the power, to paying for licensing the material that's being trained on, all that stuff is probably driving costs up for generative artificial intelligence. And so if you have newsrooms that are looking to
adopt that technology, like, I don't know, maybe it has an affordable rate right now,
if it's something you're paying for, but like once the subsidies go away, and those companies
actually look to try to turn a profit, like how much is that going to cost you? And is it worth
what you're getting out of it? And so that's one of the things that's very much not answered yet.
And so it's hard to
know if it would have a long-term impact on the news industry, which is already strapped for money.
I kind of have my doubts about the long-term impacts of generative AI on the news industry.
I mean, the other thing is it's like some of it's a little bit more innocuous. Like you could have
news industry getting better at recommendation algorithms for different stories. Like that's
a place where I think a lot of publications are relatively in the Stone Age, so to speak. They haven't TikTokified in terms of figuring
out which one of their stories to put in front of people. I kind of don't know how to feel about
that. On a basic moral level as a journalist, my own bias is that we need to have more intentionality
in the news industry and more conscientiousness about what we're presenting to people. Because I think the valuable thing that we bring to the
process as journalists is in fact our subjectivity. And I don't mean that in the sense of like,
oh, having like a really sort of sharp partisan point of view on something. What I mean is that
there were people who made like real clear judgments on what they thought was important.
And it's going to be different from what other people think. And I think that's the valuable
thing that humans bring to the process of journalism is that like, there is a human
consciousness in here that thought that it was really important that your congressman was saying
some racist shit. That is a very essential part of the process that I think gets overlooked quite
a bit. And it's something that maybe a large
language model or machine learning technology can approximate, but I just don't think we're
nearly there yet. And I don't know if you can do it at a cost that would even remotely scale.
I'm kind of a skeptic. I'm not anti-technology, of course. I would love to see investigative
desks that are really rigorous ethically and conscientious about what they produce.
I kind of want to see what they can do with machine learning technology, which they already
embrace already to some degree when scraping through massive data sets.
I just think that the actual applications that are going to change journalism are going
to be the things that the journalists themselves come up with, because I think anybody in the
C-suite is like too far removed from the production process to have even a reliable sense of the power
of this technology. Yeah, I think that's a really good point, right? The human journalists are
essential both to that judgment role, but also to having this like kind of broader knowledge of the
beat and what they're reporting on. I think we've seen time and again, these tech companies promise
us one thing and deliver something else. And, you know, I think the cost of these tools is going to
become very apparent sooner rather than later. Matt, really great to talk to you,
to dig into all this with you. Thanks so much for taking the time.
Thank you so much for caring about this. It's really important.
Matt Pierce is the president of Media Guild of the West and a former Los Angeles Times reporter.
Tech Won't Save Us is made in partnership with The Nation magazine and is hosted by me,
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