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#digitalpublishing — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #digitalpublishing, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Publishers relying on aggressive ad triggers may need a new strategy. Google officially confirmed the removal of back button vignette ads to align with its anti-spam policies and better UX standards.

    Learn more now:
    go-techsolution.com/google-ads

    #GoogleUpdate #SEOCommunity #AdTech #UserExperience #DigitalPublishing #MarketingNews

  2. Publishers relying on aggressive ad triggers may need a new strategy. Google officially confirmed the removal of back button vignette ads to align with its anti-spam policies and better UX standards.

    Learn more now:
    go-techsolution.com/google-ads

    #GoogleUpdate #SEOCommunity #AdTech #UserExperience #DigitalPublishing #MarketingNews

  3. Publishers relying on aggressive ad triggers may need a new strategy. Google officially confirmed the removal of back button vignette ads to align with its anti-spam policies and better UX standards.

    Learn more now:
    go-techsolution.com/google-ads

    #GoogleUpdate #SEOCommunity #AdTech #UserExperience #DigitalPublishing #MarketingNews

  4. Bookwire Report Shows Growth—and Opportunity—in the Spanish Language Digital Publishing Sector

    The company's overview of the Spanish-language digital publishing sector points to growth in both ebooks and audiobooks across the global marketplace and offers key insights into market trends. 
    The post Bookwire Report Shows Growth—and Opportunity—in the Spanish Language Digital Publishing Sector appeared first on Publishing Perspectives.
    publishingperspectives.com/202

    #Audiobooks #BookDistribution #Bookwire #DigitalPublishing #Ebooks

  5. Bookwire Report Shows Growth—and Opportunity—in the Spanish Language Digital Publishing Sector

    The company's overview of the Spanish-language digital publishing sector points to growth in both ebooks and audiobooks across the global marketplace and offers key insights into market trends. 
    The post Bookwire Report Shows Growth—and Opportunity—in the Spanish Language Digital Publishing Sector appeared first on Publishing Perspectives.
    publishingperspectives.com/202

    #Audiobooks #BookDistribution #Bookwire #DigitalPublishing #Ebooks

  6. Bookwire Report Shows Growth—and Opportunity—in the Spanish Language Digital Publishing Sector

    The company's overview of the Spanish-language digital publishing sector points to growth in both ebooks and audiobooks across the global marketplace and offers key insights into market trends. 
    The post Bookwire Report Shows Growth—and Opportunity—in the Spanish Language Digital Publishing Sector appeared first on Publishing Perspectives.
    publishingperspectives.com/202

    #Audiobooks #BookDistribution #Bookwire #DigitalPublishing #Ebooks

  7. Bookwire Report Shows Growth—and Opportunity—in the Spanish Language Digital Publishing Sector

    The company's overview of the Spanish-language digital publishing sector points to growth in both ebooks and audiobooks across the global marketplace and offers key insights into market trends. 
    The post Bookwire Report Shows Growth—and Opportunity—in the Spanish Language Digital Publishing Sector appeared first on Publishing Perspectives.
    publishingperspectives.com/202

    #Audiobooks #BookDistribution #Bookwire #DigitalPublishing #Ebooks

  8. Why major publishers are backing Amazon against Perplexity's AI spoofing: DCN's amicus brief backs Amazon in the Ninth Circuit, warning that Perplexity's AI agent spoofing corrupts ad metrics and undermines publisher revenue at scale. ppc.land/why-major-publishers- #Amazon #AI #DigitalPublishing #Advertising #PublisherRevenue

  9. The digital world is loud, but the soul whispers. 🌿

    I’ve launched "The Kosmic Quill," a new home for my reflections on spirituality, housing justice, and the human experience. Join me as we strip away the noise and seek truth together.
    Explore the journey: kosmicquill.com

    #KosmicQuill #GroundedMysticism #UnpolishedProphet #Spirituality #WritingCommunity #DigitalPublishing #MentalHealth #HousingJustice

  10. Although it is still difficult for authors to make big bucks in China,what I envy about their publishing ecosystem is that there's a robust digital webnovel scene where anyone can publish serialized stories on platforms accessed by millions. There's also a system where readers can unlock new chapters with credits, film studios can buy rights to novels.

    Infographic from Xinhua

    #amreading #ebooks #digitalpublishing #reading #WritingCommunity

  11. When Platforms Punish External Links

    By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

    Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — April 22, 2026

    For many Filipinos, publishing online does not stop at one platform. Writers link to their blogs. Journalists link to news sites. Small businesses link to stores and booking pages. On X, that basic behavior often comes with a cost.

    This essay looks at how suppressing external links works as a business practice, and why it harms Filipino creators, journalists, and small businesses.

    Links Are the Internet’s Core Feature

    Links are how the internet was built. They let readers move freely from one place to another. They allow creators to own their work and grow audiences beyond any single platform.

    When platforms respect links, users can build real value. When platforms punish links, users are trapped inside one system. That choice changes the internet from an open network into a closed funnel.

    What Link Suppression Looks Like in Practice

    Many users report the same pattern. Posts with external links get fewer views. Replies with links travel less. Accounts that regularly point people elsewhere lose reach over time.

    The platform rarely explains these changes. There is no clear notice and no appeal. The message is indirect but clear: stay inside the ecosystem or accept reduced visibility.

    This behavior is not random. It is repeatable.

    Why This Is an Anti-Competition Move

    When a platform discourages links to outside sites, it is protecting itself from competition. Readers are kept from leaving. Creators are pushed to publish only where the platform controls attention and data.

    For Filipino users, this is especially damaging. Many rely on outside websites for income, donations, or sales. When links are suppressed, earnings drop. Growth stalls.

    This is not about quality. It is about control.

    The Impact on Filipino Journalism

    Independent journalism in the Philippines depends on links. Reporters need to share full stories, sources, and documents. When those links are buried, news struggles to reach readers.

    Large outlets may survive. Small and local ones often do not. Link suppression quietly weakens public information while claiming to protect “engagement.”

    A platform that harms news access harms democracy and business at the same time.

    Why Creators Feel Forced to Choose

    Creators should be able to publish anywhere. On platforms that punish links, they are pushed to choose between visibility and independence.

    Some stay and give up outside publishing. Others leave and lose their audience. Either way, the platform wins control while users lose options.

    That is not a healthy market. It is lock-in by design.

    Looking Ahead

    The next essay will examine how these same systems shape advertising behavior and why many brands avoid platforms with unpredictable rules.

    When links are treated as threats, the platform is no longer open.
    It is defensive.

    For more social commentary, please see Occupy 2.5 at https://Occupy25.com

    This essay will be archived in the WPS News Archives at Amazon.

    References (APA)

    Electronic Frontier Foundation. (2023). Platform power and link suppression. https://www.eff.org

    Reuters. (2023). X limits visibility of posts with external links. https://www.reuters.com

    World Wide Web Consortium. (2022). Principles of a decentralized web. https://www.w3.org

    #anticompetition #creatorEconomy #digitalPublishing #internetFreedom #linkSuppression #mediaSustainability #onlineJournalism #Philippines #platformEconomics #smallBusinesses #socialMediaPlatforms #Twitter #XPlatform
  12. When Platforms Punish External Links

    By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

    Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — April 22, 2026

    For many Filipinos, publishing online does not stop at one platform. Writers link to their blogs. Journalists link to news sites. Small businesses link to stores and booking pages. On X, that basic behavior often comes with a cost.

    This essay looks at how suppressing external links works as a business practice, and why it harms Filipino creators, journalists, and small businesses.

    Links Are the Internet’s Core Feature

    Links are how the internet was built. They let readers move freely from one place to another. They allow creators to own their work and grow audiences beyond any single platform.

    When platforms respect links, users can build real value. When platforms punish links, users are trapped inside one system. That choice changes the internet from an open network into a closed funnel.

    What Link Suppression Looks Like in Practice

    Many users report the same pattern. Posts with external links get fewer views. Replies with links travel less. Accounts that regularly point people elsewhere lose reach over time.

    The platform rarely explains these changes. There is no clear notice and no appeal. The message is indirect but clear: stay inside the ecosystem or accept reduced visibility.

    This behavior is not random. It is repeatable.

    Why This Is an Anti-Competition Move

    When a platform discourages links to outside sites, it is protecting itself from competition. Readers are kept from leaving. Creators are pushed to publish only where the platform controls attention and data.

    For Filipino users, this is especially damaging. Many rely on outside websites for income, donations, or sales. When links are suppressed, earnings drop. Growth stalls.

    This is not about quality. It is about control.

    The Impact on Filipino Journalism

    Independent journalism in the Philippines depends on links. Reporters need to share full stories, sources, and documents. When those links are buried, news struggles to reach readers.

    Large outlets may survive. Small and local ones often do not. Link suppression quietly weakens public information while claiming to protect “engagement.”

    A platform that harms news access harms democracy and business at the same time.

    Why Creators Feel Forced to Choose

    Creators should be able to publish anywhere. On platforms that punish links, they are pushed to choose between visibility and independence.

    Some stay and give up outside publishing. Others leave and lose their audience. Either way, the platform wins control while users lose options.

    That is not a healthy market. It is lock-in by design.

    Looking Ahead

    The next essay will examine how these same systems shape advertising behavior and why many brands avoid platforms with unpredictable rules.

    When links are treated as threats, the platform is no longer open.
    It is defensive.

    For more social commentary, please see Occupy 2.5 at https://Occupy25.com

    This essay will be archived in the WPS News Archives at Amazon.

    References (APA)

    Electronic Frontier Foundation. (2023). Platform power and link suppression. https://www.eff.org

    Reuters. (2023). X limits visibility of posts with external links. https://www.reuters.com

    World Wide Web Consortium. (2022). Principles of a decentralized web. https://www.w3.org

    #anticompetition #creatorEconomy #digitalPublishing #internetFreedom #linkSuppression #mediaSustainability #onlineJournalism #Philippines #platformEconomics #smallBusinesses #socialMediaPlatforms #Twitter #XPlatform
  13. When Platforms Punish External Links

    By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

    Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — April 22, 2026

    For many Filipinos, publishing online does not stop at one platform. Writers link to their blogs. Journalists link to news sites. Small businesses link to stores and booking pages. On X, that basic behavior often comes with a cost.

    This essay looks at how suppressing external links works as a business practice, and why it harms Filipino creators, journalists, and small businesses.

    Links Are the Internet’s Core Feature

    Links are how the internet was built. They let readers move freely from one place to another. They allow creators to own their work and grow audiences beyond any single platform.

    When platforms respect links, users can build real value. When platforms punish links, users are trapped inside one system. That choice changes the internet from an open network into a closed funnel.

    What Link Suppression Looks Like in Practice

    Many users report the same pattern. Posts with external links get fewer views. Replies with links travel less. Accounts that regularly point people elsewhere lose reach over time.

    The platform rarely explains these changes. There is no clear notice and no appeal. The message is indirect but clear: stay inside the ecosystem or accept reduced visibility.

    This behavior is not random. It is repeatable.

    Why This Is an Anti-Competition Move

    When a platform discourages links to outside sites, it is protecting itself from competition. Readers are kept from leaving. Creators are pushed to publish only where the platform controls attention and data.

    For Filipino users, this is especially damaging. Many rely on outside websites for income, donations, or sales. When links are suppressed, earnings drop. Growth stalls.

    This is not about quality. It is about control.

    The Impact on Filipino Journalism

    Independent journalism in the Philippines depends on links. Reporters need to share full stories, sources, and documents. When those links are buried, news struggles to reach readers.

    Large outlets may survive. Small and local ones often do not. Link suppression quietly weakens public information while claiming to protect “engagement.”

    A platform that harms news access harms democracy and business at the same time.

    Why Creators Feel Forced to Choose

    Creators should be able to publish anywhere. On platforms that punish links, they are pushed to choose between visibility and independence.

    Some stay and give up outside publishing. Others leave and lose their audience. Either way, the platform wins control while users lose options.

    That is not a healthy market. It is lock-in by design.

    Looking Ahead

    The next essay will examine how these same systems shape advertising behavior and why many brands avoid platforms with unpredictable rules.

    When links are treated as threats, the platform is no longer open.
    It is defensive.

    For more social commentary, please see Occupy 2.5 at https://Occupy25.com

    This essay will be archived in the WPS News Archives at Amazon.

    References (APA)

    Electronic Frontier Foundation. (2023). Platform power and link suppression. https://www.eff.org

    Reuters. (2023). X limits visibility of posts with external links. https://www.reuters.com

    World Wide Web Consortium. (2022). Principles of a decentralized web. https://www.w3.org

    #anticompetition #creatorEconomy #digitalPublishing #internetFreedom #linkSuppression #mediaSustainability #onlineJournalism #Philippines #platformEconomics #smallBusinesses #socialMediaPlatforms #Twitter #XPlatform
  14. When Platforms Punish External Links

    By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

    Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — April 22, 2026

    For many Filipinos, publishing online does not stop at one platform. Writers link to their blogs. Journalists link to news sites. Small businesses link to stores and booking pages. On X, that basic behavior often comes with a cost.

    This essay looks at how suppressing external links works as a business practice, and why it harms Filipino creators, journalists, and small businesses.

    Links Are the Internet’s Core Feature

    Links are how the internet was built. They let readers move freely from one place to another. They allow creators to own their work and grow audiences beyond any single platform.

    When platforms respect links, users can build real value. When platforms punish links, users are trapped inside one system. That choice changes the internet from an open network into a closed funnel.

    What Link Suppression Looks Like in Practice

    Many users report the same pattern. Posts with external links get fewer views. Replies with links travel less. Accounts that regularly point people elsewhere lose reach over time.

    The platform rarely explains these changes. There is no clear notice and no appeal. The message is indirect but clear: stay inside the ecosystem or accept reduced visibility.

    This behavior is not random. It is repeatable.

    Why This Is an Anti-Competition Move

    When a platform discourages links to outside sites, it is protecting itself from competition. Readers are kept from leaving. Creators are pushed to publish only where the platform controls attention and data.

    For Filipino users, this is especially damaging. Many rely on outside websites for income, donations, or sales. When links are suppressed, earnings drop. Growth stalls.

    This is not about quality. It is about control.

    The Impact on Filipino Journalism

    Independent journalism in the Philippines depends on links. Reporters need to share full stories, sources, and documents. When those links are buried, news struggles to reach readers.

    Large outlets may survive. Small and local ones often do not. Link suppression quietly weakens public information while claiming to protect “engagement.”

    A platform that harms news access harms democracy and business at the same time.

    Why Creators Feel Forced to Choose

    Creators should be able to publish anywhere. On platforms that punish links, they are pushed to choose between visibility and independence.

    Some stay and give up outside publishing. Others leave and lose their audience. Either way, the platform wins control while users lose options.

    That is not a healthy market. It is lock-in by design.

    Looking Ahead

    The next essay will examine how these same systems shape advertising behavior and why many brands avoid platforms with unpredictable rules.

    When links are treated as threats, the platform is no longer open.
    It is defensive.

    For more social commentary, please see Occupy 2.5 at https://Occupy25.com

    This essay will be archived in the WPS News Archives at Amazon.

    References (APA)

    Electronic Frontier Foundation. (2023). Platform power and link suppression. https://www.eff.org

    Reuters. (2023). X limits visibility of posts with external links. https://www.reuters.com

    World Wide Web Consortium. (2022). Principles of a decentralized web. https://www.w3.org

    #anticompetition #creatorEconomy #digitalPublishing #internetFreedom #linkSuppression #mediaSustainability #onlineJournalism #Philippines #platformEconomics #smallBusinesses #socialMediaPlatforms #Twitter #XPlatform
  15. When Platforms Punish External Links

    By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

    Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — April 22, 2026

    For many Filipinos, publishing online does not stop at one platform. Writers link to their blogs. Journalists link to news sites. Small businesses link to stores and booking pages. On X, that basic behavior often comes with a cost.

    This essay looks at how suppressing external links works as a business practice, and why it harms Filipino creators, journalists, and small businesses.

    Links Are the Internet’s Core Feature

    Links are how the internet was built. They let readers move freely from one place to another. They allow creators to own their work and grow audiences beyond any single platform.

    When platforms respect links, users can build real value. When platforms punish links, users are trapped inside one system. That choice changes the internet from an open network into a closed funnel.

    What Link Suppression Looks Like in Practice

    Many users report the same pattern. Posts with external links get fewer views. Replies with links travel less. Accounts that regularly point people elsewhere lose reach over time.

    The platform rarely explains these changes. There is no clear notice and no appeal. The message is indirect but clear: stay inside the ecosystem or accept reduced visibility.

    This behavior is not random. It is repeatable.

    Why This Is an Anti-Competition Move

    When a platform discourages links to outside sites, it is protecting itself from competition. Readers are kept from leaving. Creators are pushed to publish only where the platform controls attention and data.

    For Filipino users, this is especially damaging. Many rely on outside websites for income, donations, or sales. When links are suppressed, earnings drop. Growth stalls.

    This is not about quality. It is about control.

    The Impact on Filipino Journalism

    Independent journalism in the Philippines depends on links. Reporters need to share full stories, sources, and documents. When those links are buried, news struggles to reach readers.

    Large outlets may survive. Small and local ones often do not. Link suppression quietly weakens public information while claiming to protect “engagement.”

    A platform that harms news access harms democracy and business at the same time.

    Why Creators Feel Forced to Choose

    Creators should be able to publish anywhere. On platforms that punish links, they are pushed to choose between visibility and independence.

    Some stay and give up outside publishing. Others leave and lose their audience. Either way, the platform wins control while users lose options.

    That is not a healthy market. It is lock-in by design.

    Looking Ahead

    The next essay will examine how these same systems shape advertising behavior and why many brands avoid platforms with unpredictable rules.

    When links are treated as threats, the platform is no longer open.
    It is defensive.

    For more social commentary, please see Occupy 2.5 at https://Occupy25.com

    This essay will be archived in the WPS News Archives at Amazon.

    References (APA)

    Electronic Frontier Foundation. (2023). Platform power and link suppression. https://www.eff.org

    Reuters. (2023). X limits visibility of posts with external links. https://www.reuters.com

    World Wide Web Consortium. (2022). Principles of a decentralized web. https://www.w3.org

    #anticompetition #creatorEconomy #digitalPublishing #internetFreedom #linkSuppression #mediaSustainability #onlineJournalism #Philippines #platformEconomics #smallBusinesses #socialMediaPlatforms #Twitter #XPlatform
  16. Small publishers lost 60% of search traffic as AI reshapes the web: Chartbeat data shows small publishers lost 60% of search traffic in two years while ChatGPT referrals still account for under 1% of total publisher page views. ppc.land/small-publishers-lost #SmallPublishers #SearchTraffic #AIImpact #DigitalPublishing #ChatGPT

  17. Small publishers lost 60% of search traffic as AI reshapes the web: Chartbeat data shows small publishers lost 60% of search traffic in two years while ChatGPT referrals still account for under 1% of total publisher page views. ppc.land/small-publishers-lost #SmallPublishers #SearchTraffic #AIImpact #DigitalPublishing #ChatGPT

  18. Small publishers lost 60% of search traffic as AI reshapes the web: Chartbeat data shows small publishers lost 60% of search traffic in two years while ChatGPT referrals still account for under 1% of total publisher page views. ppc.land/small-publishers-lost #SmallPublishers #SearchTraffic #AIImpact #DigitalPublishing #ChatGPT

  19. The Shifting Chronicle of Text Dissemination

    Digital publishing is changing how authors get paid and how books are sold. Learn about new options like self-publishing and hybrid models.

    #DigitalPublishing, #AuthorLife, #SelfPublishing, #BookIndustry, #PublishingNews

    newsletter.tf/digital-publishi

  20. ICYMI: GRV Media chairman disabled Google Discover after AI told him it would take 150,000 years to clean it: GRV Media co-founder Vic Daniels disabled Google Discover after AI Mode calculated 156,164 years to block all X accounts - exposing Discover's structural shift away from publishers. ppc.land/grv-media-chairman-di #GoogleDiscover #ArtificialIntelligence #DigitalPublishing #VicDaniels #GRVMedia

  21. ICYMI: GRV Media chairman disabled Google Discover after AI told him it would take 150,000 years to clean it: GRV Media co-founder Vic Daniels disabled Google Discover after AI Mode calculated 156,164 years to block all X accounts - exposing Discover's structural shift away from publishers. ppc.land/grv-media-chairman-di #GoogleDiscover #ArtificialIntelligence #DigitalPublishing #VicDaniels #GRVMedia

  22. ICYMI: GRV Media chairman disabled Google Discover after AI told him it would take 150,000 years to clean it: GRV Media co-founder Vic Daniels disabled Google Discover after AI Mode calculated 156,164 years to block all X accounts - exposing Discover's structural shift away from publishers. ppc.land/grv-media-chairman-di #GoogleDiscover #ArtificialIntelligence #DigitalPublishing #VicDaniels #GRVMedia

  23. ICYMI: GRV Media chairman disabled Google Discover after AI told him it would take 150,000 years to clean it: GRV Media co-founder Vic Daniels disabled Google Discover after AI Mode calculated 156,164 years to block all X accounts - exposing Discover's structural shift away from publishers. ppc.land/grv-media-chairman-di #GoogleDiscover #ArtificialIntelligence #DigitalPublishing #VicDaniels #GRVMedia

  24. ICYMI: GRV Media chairman disabled Google Discover after AI told him it would take 150,000 years to clean it: GRV Media co-founder Vic Daniels disabled Google Discover after AI Mode calculated 156,164 years to block all X accounts - exposing Discover's structural shift away from publishers. ppc.land/grv-media-chairman-di #GoogleDiscover #ArtificialIntelligence #DigitalPublishing #VicDaniels #GRVMedia

  25. Indie Author Lab Debuts as London Book Fair Opens Its Doors to Self-Publishers with Orna Ross and Joanna Penn

    Orna Ross and Joanna Penn reflect on a landmark year at London Book Fair, where the Alliance of Independent Authors made its biggest mark yet — debuting the Indie Author Lab, a full-day event dedicated to helping indie authors go deep on their own publishing practice, and unveiling the new ALLi Indie Author Bookstore. They discuss why 2026 felt like a genuine turning point for self-publishers at the fair, what indie authors need most in an age of abundance and AI, and why discernment and individualization may matter more now than any single piece of publishing advice.
    selfpublishingadvice.org/podca

    #Podcast #ALLi #digitalpublishing #indieauthorbookstore #IndieAuthorLab

  26. Sweden’s Storytel Reports Record Profits for 2025, Predicts Strong Growth Ahead

    "With industry projections suggesting this user base will double again over the next five years, we see significant further growth potential across our entire footprint," Storytel CEO Bodil Eriksson Torp told shareholders.
    The post Sweden’s Storytel Reports Record Profits for 2025, Predicts Strong Growth Ahead appeared first on Publishing Perspectives.
    publishingperspectives.com/202

    #Audiobooks #BodilErikssonTorp #BookSales #DigitalPublishing #financialreporting

  27. Sweden’s Storytel Reports Record Profits for 2025, Predicts Strong Growth Ahead

    "With industry projections suggesting this user base will double again over the next five years, we see significant further growth potential across our entire footprint," Storytel CEO Bodil Eriksson Torp told shareholders.
    The post Sweden’s Storytel Reports Record Profits for 2025, Predicts Strong Growth Ahead appeared first on Publishing Perspectives.
    publishingperspectives.com/202

    #Audiobooks #BodilErikssonTorp #BookSales #DigitalPublishing #financialreporting

  28. Sweden’s Storytel Reports Record Profits for 2025, Predicts Strong Growth Ahead

    "With industry projections suggesting this user base will double again over the next five years, we see significant further growth potential across our entire footprint," Storytel CEO Bodil Eriksson Torp told shareholders.
    The post Sweden’s Storytel Reports Record Profits for 2025, Predicts Strong Growth Ahead appeared first on Publishing Perspectives.
    publishingperspectives.com/202

    #Audiobooks #BodilErikssonTorp #BookSales #DigitalPublishing #financialreporting

  29. Sweden’s Storytel Reports Record Profits for 2025, Predicts Strong Growth Ahead

    "With industry projections suggesting this user base will double again over the next five years, we see significant further growth potential across our entire footprint," Storytel CEO Bodil Eriksson Torp told shareholders.
    The post Sweden’s Storytel Reports Record Profits for 2025, Predicts Strong Growth Ahead appeared first on Publishing Perspectives.
    publishingperspectives.com/202

    #Audiobooks #BodilErikssonTorp #BookSales #DigitalPublishing #financialreporting

  30. Why this Bloomberg reporter never wants to use the web again: Bloomberg's Joe Weisenthal questions why websites exist when AI chatbots handle information better, sparking debate about digital publishing's future. ppc.land/why-this-bloomberg-re #AI #DigitalPublishing #Web3 #Journalism #TechDebate

  31. Meta's making moves in the AI news game! They've just inked deals with major publishers like CNN & USA Today to bring real-time news to Meta AI.

    Is this the future of how we'll get our info, or just another feed to scroll? techcrunch.com/2025/12/05/meta #AI #TechNews #MetaAI #DigitalPublishing