Categories: AI & TechMedia

Reuters is committed to supporting the news industry and incorporating artificial intelligence

Today, I’m talking with Paul Bascobert, who is the president of Reuters, the news and information service you have undoubtedly heard of. This is part of a special Thursday series we’re running this month to explore how leaders at some of the world’s biggest companies make decisions in such a rapidly changing environment. You know, Decoder stuff.

Reuters is a great company for us to kick off with, because it’s been around basically forever. The company was founded in 1851, when the hot technology enabling new kinds of media was the telegraph, and the entire concept of a “wire service” was a wild new idea.

Here, today in 2025, the tech driving media has clearly changed more than just a little bit. Distribution in a world full of iPhones and generative AI is a really different proposition than distributing media 50 years before the invention of the radio. It’s even a pretty different proposition now than it was just 20 or 30 years ago, in the web 1.0 era.

There’s a lot there, and you’ll hear us get deep into basically every Decoder theme there is. For example, Paul and I spent a lot of time talking about how an organization with a legacy as old as Reuters’ can keep finding an audience and being successful in the current age of digital media, which is dominated by social platforms. The audience isn’t reading newspapers anymore, and I’m not even sure the next generation of news consumers will even be visiting websites. So Reuters is doing a lot of work to make sure its work can find and reach new audiences.

Decoder listeners who are familiar with our other episodes with media leaders know I’m very curious how generative AI is going to change the very business of news. And how big media companies are thinking about licensing their content to AI companies, being in litigation with those same companies, or even working with them to build new kinds of products.

Paul had a lot of really interesting thoughts here, because Reuters fundamentally has always had licensed content arrangements, because really, that’s just what a wire service is. To Paul, that dovetails neatly into a way to think about AI and AI training data. I pushed really hard to get some hard numbers out of him, so I think you’ll really enjoy the back-and-forth.

Ryan McNom

Ryan McNom is an accomplished economist, news writer, and author who has been covering the world of finance and markets since 2003. With a sharp focus on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), Nasdaq, S&P 500, and Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), Ryan delivers in-depth analysis and timely reports that help readers navigate the ever-changing landscape of the global economy. His expertise lies in breaking down complex market movements and trends into clear, actionable insights.

Recent Posts

Hyatt’s Thomas Pritzker Retires After Being Named in Newly Released Epstein Documents

Thomas Pritzker has announced his retirement as executive chairman of Hyatt Hotels after newly released…

1 day ago

U.S. Companies Resume Price Hikes as Tariffs and Labor Costs Climb

Electronics, appliances and consumer goods are seeing sharper increases as cost pressures mount.

1 day ago

Three Dead, Including Suspect, in Shooting at Rhode Island Youth Hockey Game

Authorities confirm three fatalities and multiple critical injuries following gunfire at a youth sporting event.

1 day ago

US Grants Two Licences Allowing Oil Majors to Restart Operations in Venezuela

The U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control issued two general licences covering oil and…

2 days ago

Pentagon Flags Alibaba and BYD Over Alleged Chinese Military Links

The move adds tension ahead of expected high-level talks between President Donald Trump and President…

3 days ago

Skeptical Researcher Tests Microwave Device on Himself, Develops Havana Syndrome–Like Symptoms

Working in strict secrecy, a government scientist in Norway built a machine capable of emitting…

5 days ago

This website uses cookies.