Eric Johnson is the key point person for our expansion in podcasting. Previously, he wrote about the videogame industry, as he had for AllThingsD.com, both on established and emerging platforms.
Eric spent four years in radio at 95.5 WBRU in Providence, R.I. He also wrote for the Peninsula Press, while he was a student at Stanford University.
Eric holds a B.A. in History from Brown University and an M.A. in Journalism from Stanford.
Ethics statement
Here is a statement of my ethics and coverage policies. It is more than most of you want to know, but, in the age of suspicion of the media, I am laying it all out.
I do not own stock in any company that I report on, but I may make investments in mutual funds, over whose portfolio investments I have no direct control.
I don’t accept gifts, products or favors from sources or any company I cover. On occasion, I may borrow products in the short term from companies I cover if and only if those products may be returned after I have used them to inform my writing.
Outside of Recode, I co-host a weekly podcast called Giant Geek vs. Mega n00b.
Recode is owned wholly by Vox Media, a company with an audience of 170 million worldwide. It has eight distinct media brands: The Verge (Technology and Culture), Vox.com (News), SB Nation (Sports), Polygon (Gaming), Eater (Food and Nightlife), Racked (Shopping, Beauty and Fashion), Curbed (Real Estate and Home), as well as Recode (Tech Business).
Vox Media has a number of investors, including, but not limited to, Comcast Ventures and NBCUniversal, both of which are owned by Comcast Corporation.
My posts have total editorial independence from these investors, even when they touch on products and services these companies produce, compete with, or invest in. The same goes for all content on Recode and at our conferences. No one in this group has influence on or access to the posts we publish. We will also add a direct link to this disclosure when we write directly about the companies.YouTube tech reviewer Marques Brownlee is the most famous person you wouldn’t recognize in public
Brownlee’s YouTube channel MKBHD has amassed nearly six million subscribers — and big tech companies are paying attention.
People are finally ‘waking up’ to tech’s dark side, Yelp CEO Jeremy Stoppelman says
"Silicon Valley as a whole has lost its purpose," Stoppelman says on the latest Recode Decode.
What Clinton adviser Jennifer Palmieri learned from 2016: ‘Women hold themselves back.’
Hillary Clinton thought her own life story was unimportant, Palmieri says on Recode Decode.
This week on Too Embarrassed to Ask: The YouTube shooting, Spotify’s IPO and a Facebook-Cambridge Analytica update
Recode’s Kara Swisher, Teddy Schleifer and Kurt Wagner explain some of this week’s biggest stories.
Financial Times CEO John Ridding explains how to make people pay for media
Techies pooh-poohed online subscriptions a decade ago. My, how things have changed.