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AI and TikTok are shaking up the news industry

By
David Meyer
David Meyer
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By
David Meyer
David Meyer
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November 16, 2023, 12:05 PM ET
Julie Pace, Executive Editor The Associated Press, and Yasir Khan, Editor-in-chief Thomson Reuters Foundation, talk on center stage at Altice Arena on "Media literacy in the age of AI" during the second day of Web Summit on November 14, 2023 in Lisbon, Portugal.
Julie Pace, executive editor at the Associated Press, and Yasir Khan, editor-in-chief of Thomson Reuters Foundation, talk on center stage at Altice Arena on "Media literacy in the age of AI" during the second day of Web Summit on Nov. 14, 2023, in Lisbon, Portugal. Horacio Villalobos—Corbis/Getty Images

I’m preparing to fly home to Berlin from Lisbon, where I’ve spent the last few days at this year’s unusually controversial Web Summit. A recurring theme throughout the show was that of AI and its impact on trust, and I moderated an extremely worthwhile discussion on the media-literacy side of the subject with Associated Press executive editor Julie Pace and Thomson Reuters Foundation editor-in-chief Yasir Khan.

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These are two of the most authoritative organizations in the business, and their size and stature naturally affect how they approach the advent of generative AI and its ability to concoct convincing fakes. For one thing, they have reputations that they’ve spent decades building, which means news consumers are likely to trust their output. They’re also big enough to produce their own photos and videos, and to dedicate staff to verifying outside content.

“We can’t inform our audiences about what’s real and what’s not and what to look out for unless we do that internally as well. So a lot of what we’ve been doing over these last couple of months is really developing internal frameworks, internal standards, [and] sharing them with the rest of the industry,” said Pace. “We as a news organization have to say our role is to be able to provide you trusted, accurate, real information, and…making sure that we don’t do anything that knocks us off that position becomes more essential than ever.”

“We are talking a lot about what we can do to be transparent, to be able to say: ‘This is why this photo that we’ve taken is legitimate, because we can prove that there was a photographer behind it who was in this location. Here’s a little bit about them and here’s the other work that they’ve been doing from this space,’” she added.

“I do worry about the smaller newsrooms, because a) they don’t have the brand recognition, and b) they don’t have the systems in place that help them do due diligence on a photograph, a piece of video, or a piece of text,” said Khan.

The thing is, these days many people aren’t getting their news directly from newsrooms at all, regardless of the size. Instead, they’re getting it from social media. A new Pew study shows a skyrocketing proportion of TikTok users who regularly go there for news—up from 22% to 43% just in the last few years. I chatted at the conference with Chris Chandler, a TikTok newsreader who has racked up over 250,000 followers in that period. Many of his young viewers tell him they want to get their news from someone like him rather than traditional media, he told me. This is the future and I, a digital-first journalist since I entered the newswriting game in the mid-2000s, now know how print journalists felt when people like me came along.

So how are people like Chandler supposed to handle the AI effect, in terms of both questionable content sources and the opportunities that the technology could offer?

“[I’d offer] the same advice I would give to journalists in our newsroom: Make sure you get it right, because a reputation is something that is easier to acquire and difficult to shake,” said Khan. (Chandler repeatedly told me how important he finds it to be unbiased, which is often not the case among his peers.)

Pace noted that tech companies have a big role to play in flagging inauthentic content, but both she and Khan also stressed that everyone has a responsibility to be savvy about what’s real or not. As Khan put it: “Educating the public from a very young age on being better consumers of news just builds better societies, and makes societies that are probably immune to a lot of the disinformation.”

And both expressed faith that this is what young people want. “I…think about the positive of why people have gravitated towards some TikTokers or social media influencers who are focused on doing reporting and real news,” said Pace. “It’s because they see themselves in that coverage. They think the perspective represents what they’re after more than what they’ve seen in traditional media. To me that is…still people seeking accurate information, still people wanting to go out and find what’s happening in the world. But it’s a challenge for us, to say ‘How do we make them see themselves and their perspective in what we’re doing?’”

More (reliable!) news below.

David Meyer

Want to send thoughts or suggestions to Data Sheet? Drop a line here.

NEWSWORTHY

Bing Chat rebrand. Microsoft’s Bing Chat is now called Copilot in Bing, bringing the ChatGPT/DALL-E portal in line with the company’s wider branding for its AI assistants. TechCrunch theorizes that this might be part of an effort to “divorce the tech from the search engine that launched it,” as there is still no evidence that adding OpenAI’s services has done much to increase Bing’s adoption. Meanwhile, as The Verge reports, Microsoft has started making custom data center chips to update its cloud infrastructure for the age of AI.

AI exec quits over copyright. The head of audio at Stability AI has dramatically exited the generative AI firm over its insistence (shared with its peers) that training models on copyrighted content is fair use, and that it should therefore not compensate the creators behind the content. “Today’s generative AI models can clearly be used to create works that compete with the copyrighted works they are trained on. So I don’t see how using copyrighted works to train generative AI models of this nature can be considered fair use,” Ed Newton-Rex wrote in a piece for Music Business Worldwide.

AI child labor. Wired has a disturbing, must-read article about how the data-labeling industry underpinning the biggest AI models is in some cases paying kids to do its dirty work, exposing them to hate speech and sexual content that they have to label so our virtual assistants get smarter and don’t end up offending us.

ON OUR FEED

“This misrepresentation tricks users into trusting content as organic and exacerbates the opportunity for scams to occur.”

—The nonprofit Check My Ads complains to the FTC about X’s failure to properly label advertising on its platform. “Furthermore, by failing to adequately disclose advertisements, X Corp. misrepresents the methods employed to target users or facilitate third-party ad targeting,” it added.

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT

Brian Chesky: Airbnb’s ‘holy grail’ is to become an AI travel agent, by Michal Lev-Ram

Satya Nadella instructed Microsoft to design its own silicon chip—and it could end Nvidia’s stranglehold over the sector, by Christiaan Hetzner

Apple cancelled Jon Stewart’s show, and now lawmakers want to know whether it was because of China’s ‘coercive tactics’, by Bloomberg

Blockchain not crypto: Proton Mail CEO calls new address verification feature ‘blockchain in a very pure form’, by Leo Schwartz

Building AI models is an ‘enormous waste of social resources,’ says Baidu CEO one month after his company released its latest AI model, by Paolo Confino

UPS just opened a giant new warehouse where 3,000 robots will do most of the work: ‘It’s a linchpin of our strategy’, by Bloomberg

BEFORE YOU GO

Starship rides again. SpaceX plans to take a second crack at flinging its next-gen Starship into the skies tomorrow, after the Federal Aviation Administration greenlit the launch.

The first launch earlier this year didn’t go ideally—it destroyed the launchpad and, with multiple engines failing, the Starship exploded shortly after takeoff, causing environmental damage to the site’s surroundings. But space experts agreed with Elon Musk that it was, in some ways, a success.

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