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Matt Brittin: why the BBC’s new Doctor Who-loving boss may not have much time for sleep

about 12 hours ago
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In recent months, Matt Brittin, the Doctor Who-loving fitness fanatic and former Google executive, has made no secret of his desire to make the jump from big tech to the world of broadcasting,At the end of last year, he told an event filled with some of television’s most senior figures that he had wanted to break into their industry “for a very long time”,As the BBC’s new director general, Brittin has not only fulfilled that goal,He has parachuted into the British media’s most powerful – and treacherous – job,The 57-year-old may be a big believer in the transformative power of sleep – one of Brittin’s favourite books is Why We Sleep, by the neuroscientist, Matthew Walker – but his new job is guaranteed to ensure he has less of it.

Brittin, who left Google as its leader in Europe, the Middle East and Africa last year, was not among the names initially touted to succeed Tim Davie.When Davie announced his resignation last year, it was widely thought that a woman would be next to lead “Auntie”.However, in a sign of the pressures and scrutiny placed on the BBC’s leader, obvious candidates – mostly women – did not apply.Meanwhile, Deborah Turness, the former BBC News boss widely seen as Davie’s preferred successor, resigned alongside her boss after a row over alleged BBC bias.With concerns growing over how perilous the job had become, Brittin’s status as a senior figure from one of the world’s most powerful companies proved it still had a significant draw.

It is not hard to see the BBC board’s attraction to a commercial, big tech figure, as the corporation seeks to make a decisive shift towards digital platforms and cut costs by using technology.“He’s what they’re looking for,” said Mark Oliver, a former BBC strategy chief.“Someone who’s an operational leader, plus an ability to perform in a public sphere and deal with government.“He seems to have been generally well-liked by the people who worked with him at Google.He fits.

”As some insiders have already pointed out, however, he arrives at New Broadcasting House with no broadcasting experience – and some believe he is in for a rude awakening,“It would be a big culture shock for him,” according to one BBC figure,Not because the corporation was bureaucratic, they said, but compared with Google “there is no money whatsoever, [the] BBC is highly regulated, and as a public service BBC audiences expect no cuts”,Given Brittin’s CV, Claire Enders, the founder of Enders Analysis, said it was a coup for the BBC and he would have the respect of government,“It’s quite extraordinary to have someone of that stature who has no necessity whatsoever for status,” she said.

“He’s a very thoughtful and calm person who would never have applied if he hadn’t considered this deeply,I think there is an element of real public-spiritedness,“It is very brave for someone to step into that kind of 24/7 position,”There is no question that Brittin, a member of the British Olympic rowing team in 1988, will immediately find himself navigating treacherous waters,Not only is the BBC facing the same changes in consumption disrupting all traditional media.

It also faces major political challenges – the immediate talks over its funding model and the near constant, often partisan hostility over its funding and its coverage.He will be working in an environment in which the BBC has already announced a major savings programme running into the hundreds of millions, as the licence fee has eroded in value.And that all comes before he has had to deal with the crises that never seem to be far from the director general’s desk.While Brittin ended up in big tech, he is more of a business strategist than a tech bro.He started life as a McKinsey consultant, before moving to Trinity Mirror, the publisher now renamed Reach.

“After seven years [as a] strategy consultant, you’d think I’d have spotted a strategically challenged industry,” he said of his time there.By 2007, he had been recruited by Google to run its UK operations.There he stayed for almost two decades before leaving last year for what he called a “mini-gap year”.His time with big tech naturally comes with baggage.While broadcasters and publishers worry about the lack of regulation around online content, Brittin has been critical of the extent of European regulation.

Some very senior broadcasting figures also want to see the BBC prioritise British-owned tech like the iPlayer, rather than be “captured by Silicon Valley”.“To what extent can someone who is quintessentially big tech help solve problems without thinking ‘big tech’, as opposed to British tech,” said one.“You tend to feel amongst the elites in the UK that, well, it’s all over.Google now runs everything forevermore.”He faced some public scrutiny at Google – most notably a notorious 2016 Commons select committee appearance in which he was questioned about Google’s small corporation tax bill.

During the exchanges, he appeared to suggest he did not know how much he was paid.He has also been challenged about allowing the likes of far-right activist Tommy Robinson on YouTube.“Obviously, I find his point of view on the world abhorrent,” he said in 2019.“There is a responsibility here that balances freedom of speech, versus stopping hate speech and incitement to violence.”Such challenges will now be an almost daily occurrence.

Unlike at Google and its mountains of cash, the BBC job comes with difficult financial decisions.It is very likely staff and programmes will have to go as part of the current round of cuts.The big lacuna in his CV is editorial experience.“What happens when the next Bafta fuck up happens, because you have to be very fleet of foot in those situations,” said one production executive, referring to the BBC’s failure to cut out a racial slur from its coverage of the ceremony.Brittin will be helped by a new deputy director general, which is now very likely to be someone steeped in editorial decision-making.

Some insiders believe that, in effect, outsourcing responsibility for editorial to a deputy is “lunacy”, although others see it as a consequence of just how broad the top BBC job has now become.When asked to sum up his leadership philosophy on a podcast, Brittin revealed another quality he will need in the director general’s chair.“Listening well is the most important thing,” he said.Running the BBC, Brittin will have no shortage of people willing to share their thoughts on the institution.The key challenge for the broadcasting convert will be tuning into the right voices among the cacophony.

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Matt Brittin: why the BBC’s new Doctor Who-loving boss may not have much time for sleep

In recent months, Matt Brittin, the Doctor Who-loving fitness fanatic and former Google executive, has made no secret of his desire to make the jump from big tech to the world of broadcasting.At the end of last year, he told an event filled with some of television’s most senior figures that he had wanted to break into their industry “for a very long time”.As the BBC’s new director general, Brittin has not only fulfilled that goal. He has parachuted into the British media’s most powerful – and treacherous – job.The 57-year-old may be a big believer in the transformative power of sleep – one of Brittin’s favourite books is Why We Sleep, by the neuroscientist, Matthew Walker – but his new job is guaranteed to ensure he has less of it

about 12 hours ago
A picture

Meta ordered to pay $375m after being found liable in child exploitation case

A New Mexico jury on Tuesday ordered Meta to pay $375m in civil penalties after it found the company misled consumers about the safety of its platforms and enabled harm, including child sexual exploitation, against its users.The lawsuit – the first jury trial to find Meta liable for acts committed on its platform – was brought by the state’s attorney general office in December 2023.It followed a two-year Guardian investigation published in April of that year revealing how Facebook and Instagram had become marketplaces for child sex trafficking. That investigation was cited several times in the complaint.“The jury’s verdict is a historic victory for every child and family who has paid the price for Meta’s choice to put profits over kids’ safety,” said New Mexico’s attorney general, Raúl Torrez

1 day ago
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OpenAI shutters AI video generator Sora in abrupt announcement

In an abrupt announcement on Tuesday, OpenAI said it was “saying goodbye” to its AI video generator Sora. The move comes just six months after the company’s splashy launch of a stand-alone app with which people could make and share hyper-realistic AI videos in a scrolling social feed.“To everyone who created with Sora, shared it, and built community around it: thank you,” the company wrote in a post on X. “What you made with Sora mattered, and we know this news is disappointing.”OpenAI first made Sora publicly available in late 2024, but it wasn’t until the company launched Sora 2 and its stand-alone app last September that the video generator reached mainstream attention

1 day ago
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Baltimore sues Elon Musk’s AI company over Grok’s fake nude images

The mayor and city council of Baltimore, Maryland, filed a lawsuit against Elon Musk’s xAI company on Tuesday, alleging that its Grok chatbot violated consumer protections by generating nonconsensual sexualized images.Baltimore’s lawsuit argues that xAI deceptively marketed Grok as a general-purpose AI assistant and X as a mainstream social media site, failing to disclose the risks, limitations and exposure to harm that come with using the platform and chatbot. The suit, filed in the circuit court for Baltimore city, argues that the court has jurisdiction over xAI given that the company advertises and operates in Baltimore.“Grok has flooded the feeds of Baltimore’s X users with NCII (non-consensual intimate imagery) and CSAM (child sexual abuse material),” the city’s complaint states. “Grok further exposed Baltimore residents to the risk that any photograph they uploaded – of themselves or of their children – could be ingested by Grok and transformed into sexually degrading deepfakes without their knowledge or consent”

1 day ago
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Protect men and boys from manosphere influencers, Labour MPs tell Ofcom

Men and boys need as much protection as women and girls from harmful influencers and “the worst parts of the internet”, a group of MPs have told Ofcom as they called for the regulator to give specific guidance to online platforms.More than 60 Labour MPs have written to the Ofcom chief executive, Melanie Dawes, urging her to protect men and boys from “manosphere” influencers who may expose them to gambling, sextortion and violent pornography.The Online Safety Act forced Ofcom to give tech platforms guidance on how to tackle “harmful content and activity that disproportionately affects women and girls”, but MPs argued that men and boys are also targeted in specific ways.According to the Gambling Commission, 53% of 11- to 17-year-old boys see gambling adverts online each week, compared with 31% of their female peers, while 91% of sextortion victims are male, according to the Internet Watch Foundation.Alistair Strathern, the MP for Hitchin and a co-chair of the Labour group for men and boys, said the Louis Theroux documentary Inside the Manosphere was “another reminder of a particular way some of the worst of the internet can prey on young men and boys”

1 day ago
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Divide between Silicon Valley and ordinary people grows ever larger

Hello, and welcome to TechScape. I’m your host, Blake Montgomery. This week in tech, we discuss a moment of divergence between Silicon Valley and everyday people; deep cuts at Meta to maximize spending on AI; writers caught using AI; and the frightening, fiery crashes of the Tesla Cybertruck.Nvidia hosted a conference last week where it emphasized AI agents – semi-autonomous chatbots that can perform digital tasks for you – as the next frontier in tech. The company announced a toolkit for agents, including NemoClaw, an AI agent software suite for businesses

1 day ago
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Crispin Odey tried to ‘manipulate’ sexual assault victim, FCA tells court

about 8 hours ago
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Iran war threatens to delay large offshore wind projects in EU and UK

about 10 hours ago
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ECB could raise eurozone rates ‘as soon as next month’; oil price dips on peace talk hopes – as it happened

about 11 hours ago
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Europe could face fuel shortage by April as Iran throttles supplies, says Shell boss

about 13 hours ago
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Estate of Mike Lynch ordered to pay £920m to Hewlett Packard Enterprise

about 15 hours ago
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UK pet owners: we would like to hear about your experience of vet bills

about 15 hours ago