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The Newspaper That Hired ChatGPT

The Atlantic - Technology

For more than 20 years, print media has been a bit of a punching bag for digital-technology companies. Craigslist killed the paid classifieds, free websites led people to think newspapers and magazines were committing robbery when they charged for subscriptions, and the smartphone and social media turned reading full-length articles into a chore. Now generative AI is in the mix--and many publishers, desperate to avoid being left behind once more, are rushing to harness the technology themselves. Several major publications, including The Atlantic, have entered into corporate partnerships with OpenAI and other AI firms. Any number of experiments have ensued--publishers have used the software to help translate work into different languages, draft headlines, and write summaries or even articles.


Insider will start experimenting with AI to write articles

#artificialintelligence

Insider plans to begin experimenting with ways to leverage AI in its journalism, its global editor-in-chief Nicholas Carlson told Axios. Why it matters: "A tsunami is coming," Carlson said. "We can either ride it or get wiped out by it." Details: The company will set up a working group first to test ways to responsibly incorporate AI into its workflow before rolling out a set of AI rules and best practices to the broader newsroom. The rest of the newsroom will be encouraged to use AI to generate outlines for stories, fix typos, craft headlines optimized for search engines, and prep interview questions.


A Tech News Site Has Been Using AI To Write Articles, So We Did The Same Thing Here

#artificialintelligence

Technology news outlet CNET has been found to be using Artificial Intelligence (AI) to write articles about personal finance without any prior announcement or explanation. The articles, which numbered at 73, covered topics such as "What Is Zelle and How Does It Work?" and had a small disclaimer at the bottom of each reading, "This article was generated using automation technology and thoroughly edited and fact-checked by an editor on our editorial staff." The bylines on these articles read "CNET Money Staff" without any indication that they were generated by AI. The use of AI to write these articles was first brought to light by a Twitter user, and further investigation revealed that the articles have been generated using AI since November 2022. The extent and specific form of AI being used by CNET is not currently known as the company did not respond to questions about their use of artificial intelligence.


AI Tools - BELOBABA

#artificialintelligence

This AI allows you to send personalized messages to all your LinkedIn contacts. Create a CSV with a list of people you are interested in, the AI checks their latest posts or the company they work for and creates a specific message for each user answering their comment. The personalization is very good, I mean it does not use standard phrases, but rather responds exactly on the topic being discussed. You can also customize emails, but maybe it's better to use ChatGPT for that. You can use a temporary mail.


ChatGPT can tell jokes, even write articles. But only humans can detect its fluent bullshit Kenan Malik

The Guardian

As the capabilities of natural language processing technology continue to advance, there is a growing hype around the potential of chatbots and conversational AI systems. One such system, ChatGPT, claims to be able to engage in natural, human-like conversation and even provide useful information and advice. However, there are valid concerns about the limitations of ChatGPT and other conversational AI systems, and their ability to truly replicate human intelligence and interaction. No, I didn't write that. It was actually written by ChatGPT itself, a conversational AI software program, after I asked it to create "an opening paragraph to an article sceptical about the abilities of ChatGPT in the style of Kenan Malik". And it is not difficult to see why there has been such excitement, indeed hype, about the latest version of the chatbot since it was released a week ago.


Artificial intelligence has begun to exceed expectations

#artificialintelligence

In 2020 The Guardian published an article that had been written by AI. It was about the increasing use of AI in journalism, and how it is changing the landscape of the industry. It discussed how AI is being used to generate news stories, and how it is being used to help reporters with their work. It was so natural that it was hard to believe that it was written by a software called GPT-3 developed by OpenAI, a research company. The Guardian isn't the only news organization using algorithms to write articles.


How might AI accidentally save the world?

#artificialintelligence

Imagine a situation: you are the scientist who wants to create a robot using unsupervised learning. At first, you want him to be smart, so you spend two weeks putting in all the data. Then, you ask him to write articles about global warming in physical copy. It understands everything now so what it needs to do is to write and write and write. You keep it working and go to eat your dinner.


How a robot wrote for Engadget

AITopics Original Links

John McCarthy, the late computer scientist who first coined the term "artificial intelligence," famously said: "As soon as it works, no one calls it AI any more." What was once cutting-edge AI is now considered standard behavior for computers. As I write this, my computer is continuously performing millions of tasks, caching files, managing RAM and balancing CPU loads. The algorithms behind many of these operations would have been considered AI years ago. Last year, I looked into how well neural networks -- programs that behave like a scaled-down version of your brain's neurons -- are able to write.


How a robot wrote for Engadget

#artificialintelligence

John McCarthy, the late computer scientist who first coined the term "artificial intelligence," famously said: "As soon as it works, no one calls it AI any more." What was once cutting-edge AI is now considered standard behavior for computers. As I write this, my computer is continuously performing millions of tasks, caching files, managing RAM and balancing CPU loads. The algorithms behind many of these operations would have been considered AI years ago. Last year, I looked into how well neural networks -- programs that behave like a scaled-down version of your brain's neurons -- are able to write.