The story actually says $30 billion, but what's ten billion between friends?
On the other hand, the business-side reporters are saying the deal (the same deal) is worth $14.3 billion, because economics is stupid.
The discrepancy between $14B and $30B is because Paramount has $16B worth of debt, and the debt would come along with the sale. This actually matters because the terms of who keeps the debt can affect who gets paid, if ever. Sometimes what happens is just an asset sale, and the former shell of a company that's left holding the debt with no assets folds, leaving the creditors holding the bag. (Spoiler: the creditors are still going to end up at least taking a haircut if this sale happens.)
For those of you in the board gaming hobby, here's a recent example: when that toxic dumpster fire The Gaming Goat sold out to new owners, the new owners assumed the assets of the former company but not the entire company. So the new owners of the assets got all of TGG's inventory, but the Gaming Goat held the pre-order obligations and then promptly folded.