❌

Normal view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.
Before yesterdayMain stream

Fox bets on podcasts — and former Fox News stars like Tucker Carlson and Megyn Kelly

10 February 2025 at 08:38
Tucker Carlson speaks on tour in Arizona, October 2024
Tucker Carlson was a Fox News star and then got shoved out of Fox. Now he's (kind of) reuniting with Fox News' parent company.

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

  • Rupert Murdoch's Fox Corp. makes almost all its money from traditional TV.
  • But it thinks it can make money from podcasts, too.
  • That's why it bought Red Seat Ventures, a podcasting company that works with former Fox News stars.

There are lots of reasons to believe podcasts are newly important in today's political/media environment. Like, say, the world's biggest video company telling you it's really into podcasting.

But if you want real evidence, look for people writing checks to podcast companies. Which is what Rupert Murdoch just did: His Fox Corp. just acquired Red Seat Ventures, a company that helps podcast stars β€” generally on the right side of the political spectrum β€” make money.

If "Red Seat Ventures" rings a bell somewhere in the back of your head, it may be because you were reading Business Insider back in November, when I talked to Red Seat Ventures CEO Chris Balfe about the importance of podcasting in the 2024 election.

And/or: Maybe you listened to my "Channels" podcast interview with him. (I got more feedback on that chat than any other show I've done in a while.)

Megyn Kelly at a Trump-Vance lectern
Megyn Kelly, who spoke at the Trump-Vance victory rally ahead of the inauguration in January, works with Red Seat Ventures.

Scott Olson/Getty Images

If, for some reason, you missed those, a quick recap: Red Seat handles production and ad sales for a roster of high-profile podcasters, several of whom used to be high-profile Fox News stars but had messy breakups with the cable channel β€” Tucker Carlson, Megyn Kelly, and Bill O'Reilly.

Which means Fox is now going to make money from those personalities yet again.

Except that now, instead of employing them, it will make money from them as a vendor. (It may or may not be significant that Red Seat Ventures won't be a part of Fox News itself β€” instead, it will be housed in Fox Corp.'s digital wing, along with Tubi, its popular and free streaming service.) Fox and Balfe were both mum about a purchase price.

Big picture: Fox's deal is a bet that podcasts β€” in both audio and video form β€” are on the upswing. Which is something you hear a bunch from podcasting industry folks these days, following a couple-year trough where the sector dug itself out from high-priced talent deals and acquisitions that didn't work out.

And in Fox's case, it's also a hedge: Maybe the rise of people like Carlson β€” whose 2023 departure from Fox remains a sort of mystery β€” as independent talk-show hosts is a threat to Fox News, especially as the channel's audience continues to age.

Or maybe podcasts are simply a nice complementary business to its core TV operation, which will be spitting out billions of dollars a year in profits for a long time.

Either way, Fox wants a piece of it β€” even if it means working with people it had stopped working with.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Apple chips can be hacked to leak secrets from Gmail, iCloud, and more

28 January 2025 at 12:56

Apple-designed chips powering Macs, iPhones, and iPads contain two newly discovered vulnerabilities that leak credit card information, locations, and other sensitive data from the Chrome and Safari browsers as they visit sites such as iCloud Calendar, Google Maps, and Proton Mail.

The vulnerabilities, affecting the CPUs in later generations of Apple A- and M-series chip sets, open them to side channel attacks, a class of exploit that infers secrets by measuring manifestations such as timing, sound, and power consumption. Both side channels are the result of the chips’ use of speculative execution, a performance optimization that improves speed by predicting the control flow the CPUs should take and following that path, rather than the instruction order in the program.

A new direction

The Apple silicon affected takes speculative execution in new directions. Besides predicting control flow CPUs should take, it also predicts the data flow, such as which memory address to load from and what value will be returned from memory.

Read full article

Comments

Β© Apple

❌
❌