Behind the USA Today and 220 other publications, the publication company is rolling a chatbot-like tool today called Depardive who can interact with the readers, briefly present the insight from its journalism, and suggest new content from its sites.
At the Wired AI Power Summit in New York, Gonet and USA Today Network CEO Mike Reid said, “Now visitors have a reliable AI answer engine on our platforms, which they want to connect with anything, whatever they want to ask,”, Wiard AI Power Summit in New York and the CEO of the CEO of the CEO Said, an incident that brings voices together from the technical industry, politics and media world, “and it is really performing very well.”
Most publishers have a terrible relationship with AI, as chatbots Trained on their content Now summarizing it and Eating traffic He used to send the search engine to them.
Reid said that Google’s AI observation facility has dramatically cut traffic for publishers throughout the industry. Reid further said on today’s announcement, “We are watching the same film as everyone is watching.” “We can see some risks for any material distribution model in the future that are mainly based on SEO optimization.”
Like other publishers, Ganenet has signed some deals with AI companies including Amazon and Perplexity to license his content. Company actively Blocks web scrapers Cry the websites to steal the content.
Deeddive represents a condition that exploiting the same generous artificial intelligence technique can help publishers attract the attention of readers by joining them in new ways.
The device replaces a traditional search box and automatically suggests questions that the readers want to ask. For example, today it provides as a sign, “How does Trump’s fed policy affect the economy?”
Deeddive produces a small answer to the query with relevant stories from the USA Today network. Reid states that it is important that its output is deepened by factually based on correct information and does not come out of the opinion pieces. “We only look at our real journalism,” they say.
Reid says that his company hopes to reveal more about the interests of the readers. “This can help us from a revenue point of view,” he said.
Deeddive was developed by advertising company Tabola. Tabula CEO Adam Singolda says that her firm developed several open source models and developed deeply.
Singolda says that in about 11,000 publishers, the data collected from its network of more than 600 million daily readers has intensive benefits. He says that the equipment “The articles obtained from our publisher partners have the basis of every answer and require sentences-level quotes for those sources” and avoid creating output if information from two sources seems to be for struggle.
Gaynet’s CEO Reid said before today’s program that, along with Tabola, his firm is interested in searching the agent tool for readers’ shopping decisions. “Our audience has a high intention to buy,” they say. “This is really the next step here.”

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