Tag Archives: Journalist

A cultural movement for Homo Extensus?

Faced with the challenges of Artificial Intelligence, there is a need for a mutation in the DNA of human intelligence, as was the case with the techno-cognitive revolutions of the past. An initial response to this need for profound change is foreshadowed by the anthropological paradigm of Homo Extensus, which, moreover, is entirely still to…

The vulgarization of content in social media

In global digital platforms such as Facebook, Instagram, X or Tik Tok, content is distributed in large quantities that would find no place in traditional media: material of the lowest quality or that also has questionable ethical value, forms of offense, racism, insult, pornography, trivialization, vulgarity. Expressions that would be censored within traditional media, such…

The mutant publisher

Mutant publishing is the emerging condition of the publishing industry, which must develop new forms in a regenerative startup process to meet digital challenges. The publishing industry is being profoundly impacted by the advent of digital platforms, which are challenging business models and the very role of publishers. Faced with such a serious threat to…

The journalist between the real and synthetic world

Artificial intelligence offers multiple opportunities to transform the journalism profession through a range of innovative features. In general, AI is not crucial to content generation as such, the final drafting of which is always the journalist’s job. Instead, artificial intelligence can provide a range of services to simplify onerous research, analysis, and synthesis tasks, and…

Why an AI-book: mutant publishing

To consistently describe the forms of Extended Intelligence, Marshall Mc Luhan’s dictum was sought to be applied: the “Medium is the message.” The body of knowledge, its physical form, affects the content. So here is an opportunity to develop an innovative format, the AI-book, with some distinctive features: Consistent with the principle of Homo Extensus,…

The thought of freedom of the press

With printing, widespread access to classical texts, including in the original ancient languages, fueled humanistic and Renaissance culture. The first forms of newspapers, posters, gazettes with a few sheets, which were far more widespread than books, were also born. The era of publishing also developed-since Gutenberg, both inventor and entrepreneur, destined to exert a profound…