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- More widely, this year’s data confirm how the various shocks of the last few years, including the Coronavirus pandemic, have further accelerated structural shifts towards a more digital, mobile, and platform-dominated media environment, with further implications for the business models and formats of journalism.
reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/digital-news-report/2022/dnr-executive-summary
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Jun 9, 2021 · UK adults spent an average of three hours and 47 minutes online every day during the pandemic, an annual survey of media habits by regulator Ofcom has found.
Jan 9, 2024 · But in recent years this has started to change, partly because of new devices, partly because platforms have emerged that specialise in audio and video creation, discovery, and distribution, and partly because many younger consumers show a preference for using these formats over text.
- Social Media Started in The Early 2000s
- In Rich Countries, Almost All Young People Use Social Media
- Some Perspective on How Fast and Profound These Rapid Changes Are
MySpace was the first social media site to reach a million monthly active users – it achieved this milestone around 2004. This is arguably the beginning of social media as we know it.1 In the chart, we plot monthly active users across various platforms since 2004. Some large social media sites, such as Facebook, YouTube, and Reddit, have been aroun...
From a back-of-the-envelope calculation, we know that, if Facebook had 2.3 billion users in 2019, then at least 30% of the world was using social media.2This is just an average – usage rates were much higher for some world regions, specifically for some population groups. Young people tend to use social media more frequently. In fact, in rich count...
The percentage of US adults who use social media increased from 5% in 2005 to 79% in 2019. Even on a global stage, the speed of diffusion is striking: Facebook surged from covering around 1.5% of the world population in 2008 to around 30% in 2018.5 How does this compare to the diffusion of other communication technologies that make part of our ever...
More widely, this year’s data confirm how the various shocks of the last few years, including the Coronavirus pandemic, have further accelerated structural shifts towards a more digital, mobile, and platform-dominated media environment, with further implications for the business models and formats of journalism.
- The business of journalism is looking up for some. One of the biggest surprises in this year’s survey is the growth in revenue reported by many publishers.
- Audience strategies and publisher innovation. Following the shock of COVID, the key mood in our survey this year seems to be around consolidation when it comes to product development.
- The practice of journalism: hybrid newsrooms, generational change, and new agendas. Almost two years into the pandemic many newsrooms are unrecognisable, some remain largely empty.
- Government regulation, privacy, and the future of platforms. For the last few years, we have tracked the inevitable march towards greater regulation of giant tech companies as they exert a bigger influence over our lives.
Jun 23, 2022 · Each expansion of media technologies — from photography to the high-speed press to radio to television to cable — has rearranged the way we collect and make news, distribute it, and consume it.
Apr 22, 2021 · A Look at the Changing Media Landscape in the UK and Europe in 2021. The norms for media planning have changed rapidly thanks to Covid-19. Pandemic lifestyle shifts have seen many of us spending more time at home and less time taking trips outside.