Newsroom Robots

Nikita Roy

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.

  1. Ivar Krustok: How Estonia’s Media Giant Builds AI That Actually Works

    8 СЕНТ.

    Ivar Krustok: How Estonia’s Media Giant Builds AI That Actually Works

    In Estonia, Delfi Meedia has built one of the strongest foundations for AI in journalism. With one of the highest digital subscription rates in the world, Delfi has moved beyond the buzz around AI to put it into everyday practice, supporting both its journalism and business. In this episode, host Nikita Roy is joined by Ivar Krustok, Chief AI & Innovation Officer at Delfi Meedia. Ivar breaks down how a small-market publisher is shipping AI that actually helps journalists: from live cross-language translation and newsroom bots to an in-house “company ChatGPT” toolkit wired into 25 years of archives and public records. Key topics include: •Delfi’s three-bucket AI strategy: everyday newsroom tools, experimental long-term projects, and company-wide literacy. •Why Delfi built its own “company ChatGPT” toolkit to search 25 years of archives. •How bots and agents are transforming dashboards into conversational tools for subscriptions, ads, and editorial performance. •Lessons from AI experiments, from court-case monitoring that surfaces hidden stories to audience-facing image generators. •The ongoing challenge of scaling AI literacy across hundreds of staff while keeping adoption practical and trust-centered. 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.

    1 ч. 6 мин.
  2. Djordje Padejski: Why AI Literacy Belongs at the Core of Journalism Education

    8 СЕНТ.

    Djordje Padejski: Why AI Literacy Belongs at the Core of Journalism Education

    As a new academic year begins, journalism schools face a defining challenge: how to prepare students for a profession being reshaped by AI. At Stanford University, Djordje Padejski is leading the way. A veteran investigative journalist and now associate director of the John S. Knight Journalism Fellowships at Stanford, he created one of the earliest AI-focused journalism courses at Arizona State University before bringing it to Stanford last year. His classroom is less lecture hall and more lab, where students test AI tools and also learn to examine them. On Newsroom Robots, Djordje shared how he structures his course and what journalism schools must do to prepare the next generation of journalists. Key topics include: Why journalism education must move beyond teaching AI as just a tool and instead frame it as a socio-technical phenomenon.How to embed AI literacy in classrooms by separating hype from reality, contextualizing the history of AI, and examining its cultural and ethical limits.Practical strategies Djordje uses to structure his Stanford course, from lab-style experimentation to peer-led discussions that uncover both opportunities and pitfalls of tools like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and NotebookLM.The importance of teaching students not just how to use AI but how to critically assess its strengths, biases, and limitations.What a future journalism curriculum or degree built around AI might look like, and how educators across disciplines can prepare the next generation of reporters. 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.

    48 мин.
  3. Florent Daudens: How Open-Source AI Puts Newsrooms Back in the Driver’s Seat

    15 ИЮЛ.

    Florent Daudens: How Open-Source AI Puts Newsrooms Back in the Driver’s Seat

    What if the future of journalism isn’t locked behind the paywalls of big tech companies, but freely available to every newsroom willing to embrace it? Too often, the conversation around AI in newsrooms centers on big tech, like OpenAI’s ChatGPT or Google’s Gemini. These are powerful tools, no doubt but they come with caveats: mainly cost, limited transparency, and little to no control over where your data ends up. But there’s another world of AI rapidly evolving in parallel and it might be journalism’s best path forward: open-source AI. In this episode of Newsroom Robots, host Nikita Roy reconnects with returning guest Florent Daudens, now the Press Lead at Hugging Face, one of the leading platforms powering open source AI. Formerly a newsroom leader driving AI integration at Canada’s Radio-Canada, Florent now sits at the heart of the open source AI movement. Key topics include: Why open source AI matters for journalism and how it compares to proprietary modelsThe rise of AI agents and what they mean for editorial control and user experienceHow compressed, privacy-first models running on laptops and phones could change the gameThe environmental cost of AI and how newsrooms can make more sustainable tech choicesWhat news apps might look like in an agent-powered futureHow newsrooms can start experimenting with open source AI (no dev team required) Plus, Florent shares 20 must-know open source AI tools for journalists, explains how writing is building in the age of AI, and discusses why owning the experience, not just the content, will be key to journalism’s survival 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.

    1 ч. 4 мин.
  4. 9 ИЮЛ.

    Fabian Heckenberg, Naja Nielsen & Gard Steiro: The Hard Truths About AI Every Newsroom Leader Can’t Ignore (Recorded Live at Nordic AI in Media Summit 2025)

    In this live episode of Newsroom Robots, host Nikita Roy moderates a panel discussion recorded at the Nordic AI and Media Summit in Copenhagen. The conversation features Gard Steiro (Editor-in-Chief and CEO of VG in Norway), Fabian Heckenberger (Managing Editor and Senior Editor for AI at Süddeutsche Zeitung in Germany), and Naja Nielsen (Media Director at SVT in Sweden and former Digital Director at BBC News). They discuss how news organizations are approaching the complexities of integrating AI into editorial workflows, organizational strategy, and audience experiences. The conversation focuses on the tensions, trade-offs, and open questions that newsroom leaders are wrestling with. Key topics include: How AI is shifting from isolated projects to infrastructure across newsroom operations, and the implications for leadership and cross-functional teams.Why VG uses a fixed one-year runway model to evaluate AI experiments, and what happens when projects don’t deliver measurable outcomes.The role of transparency and relevance in building trust with audiences, particularly for younger and emerging user groups.SVT’s approach to organizational learning, including how leadership can empower experimentation without centralizing all decision-making.What interdisciplinary teams look like in practice—drawing on SZ’s experience embedding editorial staff into product and tech teams.Challenges with prioritization: choosing between maintaining legacy systems, launching new GenAI tools, or refining user experience.Why personalization can’t rely on a human-in-the-loop model, and how AI agents may soon take on quality assurance roles within content pipelines.Emerging revenue considerations: from small-scale funding streams and philanthropic support to fundamental questions about what people are actually willing to pay for. The episode wraps with a candid exchange about whether the article format has outlived its usefulness in an era of personalized, multimodal news delivery and what that means for the future of storytelling and journalistic impact. Subscribe to the Newsroom Robots newsletter for more insights and updates from host Nikita Roy. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    40 мин.
  5. Gina Chua: Where Journalism’s Value Lives When AI Tells the Story

    24 ИЮН.

    Gina Chua: Where Journalism’s Value Lives When AI Tells the Story

    In this live episode, host Nikita Roy sits down with Gina Chua, Executive Editor of Semafor, recorded at an event at New York University hosted in collaboration with the AI networking group, Humans in the Loop. Gina brings a uniquely expansive lens to the AI conversation, grounded in her leadership across global newsrooms—from Reuters and The Wall Street Journal to the South China Morning Post. Now at Semafor, she continues to be a leading voice rethinking the information ecosystem for an AI-driven world. In this wide-ranging and candid conversation, Gina explores how generative AI is reshaping the fundamental architecture of journalism—from editorial workflows and business models to the core definition of a story. She discusses her team’s experiments with building custom AI tools like Miso, a multilingual aggregation system powering Semafor’s Signals format. Key topics include: How Semafor is using AI for multilingual search, editorial summarization, and style guide enforcement built directly into Google Suite workflows using App Scripts and Claude.The challenges of building durable AI products in newsrooms including unstable models, integration hurdles, and evolving use cases.Rethinking the role of journalists in an AI world: where value lies in asking the right questions, building audience understanding, and creating narratives only humans can shape.The importance of reframing journalism’s mission not as saving “journalists” or “journalism,” but as delivering information in the public interest.Behind-the-scenes on JESS (Journalist Expert Safety Support), a chatbot Gina prototyped and co-developed to democratize access to field safety guidance for reporters worldwide.Why the future of news depends on tight, authentic relationships with audiences and how startups like Semafor are designing for trust, voice, and community from the ground up. The episode closes with reflections on Gina’s personal coding journey with AI including her work building an assistive tool for a friend with ALS. Sign up for the Newsroom Robots newsletter for episode insights and updates from host Nikita Roy. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    51 мин.
  6. Zach Seward: How a Five-Person AI Team Is Powering Innovation at The New York Times

    30 МАЯ

    Zach Seward: How a Five-Person AI Team Is Powering Innovation at The New York Times

    In this live episode, host Nikita Roy sits down with Zach Seward, Editorial Director of AI Initiatives at The New York Times, recorded at the ONA x Newsroom Robots AI Leadership Summit in Detroit. With a background that spans journalism, product, and executive leadership, Zach brings a rare blend of newsroom insight and entrepreneurial thinking to the challenges of this AI era. Before joining the Times, he co-founded Quartz, where he served as editor-in-chief, CEO, and chief product officer, helping to pioneer digital-native journalism. Now at The Times, he’s built a new editorial AI team from the ground up, experimenting with tooling, guiding newsroom adoption, and thinking through what comes next in how journalism is produced, distributed, and consumed. Key topics include: How the Times is using AI to support investigations, including analyzing hundreds of hours of leaked video and massive public data sets using custom LLM workflows.Echo, the in-house summarization tool that’s helping reporters transform articles, headlines, and tags across a range of newsroom needs.Lessons from building a five-person AI team inside a 2,000-person newsroom and why newsroom trust and individual agency are central to successful adoption.Why Zach’s team sees itself as an “AI enablement” group and how their newsroom-wide roadshow has sparked experimentation.The role of AI in reader experiences, from improving internal search to exploring voice interfaces that reimagine how audiences interact with journalism.What it means to build durable, future-ready news products in a media environment increasingly shaped by AI distribution and personalization systems. 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.

    59 мин.
  7. Cheryl Phillips: How AI Is Uncovering Hidden Stories in Local Government

    30 МАЯ

    Cheryl Phillips: How AI Is Uncovering Hidden Stories in Local Government

    When officials in Santa Clara County (home to Silicon Valley) publicly proclaimed they were not sharing data with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, they likely did not expect to be caught in a contradiction. Yet behind the scenes, those same officials had recently signed new contracts with the federal agency — a fact that might have remained hidden if not for a new generation of AI tools developed at Stanford University. This breakthrough was made possible by Big Local News, a Stanford-based initiative using AI to help local journalists uncover stories hidden deep within public records. As local newsrooms grapple with shrinking resources and overwhelming amounts of data, tools like these are helping restore investigative capacity where it’s needed most. In this episode of Newsroom Robots, Cheryl Phillips, founder and co-director of Big Local News at Stanford University, joins host Nikita Roy to share how her team is building AI-powered tools that support watchdog journalism and make complex data more accessible to reporters across the country. Key topics include: Agenda Watch, a tool that scrapes and indexes public meeting agendas to surface early signals of newsworthy developments across thousands of local agencies.DataTalk, an AI assistant that turns natural language questions into campaign finance data queries, simplifying analysis for journalists without coding expertise.The use of generative AI and large-scale scraping systems to analyze police misconduct records and create public-facing accountability databases.How Big Local News uses Slack-integrated bots to deliver real-time alerts on layoffs and problematic fiscal audits to local newsrooms across the U.S. 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.

    51 мин.

Оценки и отзывы

5
из 5
Оценок: 15

Об этом подкасте

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.

Вам может также понравиться