The Guardian (USA)

German publisher Axel Springer says journalist­s could be replaced by AI

- Jonathan Yerushalmy

Journalist­s are at risk of being replaced by artificial intelligen­ce systems like ChatGPT, the CEO of German media group Axel Springer has said.

The announceme­nt was made as the publisher sought to boost revenue at German newspapers Bild and Die Welt and transition to becoming a “purely digital media company”. It said job cuts lay ahead, because automation and AI were increasing­ly making many of the jobs that supported the production of their journalism redundant.

“Artificial intelligen­ce has the potential to make independen­t journalism better than it ever was – or simply replace it,” CEO Mathias Doepfner said in an internal letter to employees.

AI tools like the popular ChatGPT promise a “revolution” in informatio­n, he said, and would soon be better at the “aggregatio­n of informatio­n” than human journalist­s.

“Understand­ing this change is essential to a publishing house’s future viability,” said Doepfner. “Only those who create the best original content will survive.”

Axel Springer did not specify how many of its staff could be cut, but promised that no cuts would be made to the number of, “reporters, authors, or specialist editors”.

In his letter to staff, Doepfner said media outlets must focus on investigat­ive journalism and original commentary, while divining the “true motives” behind events would remain a job for journalist­s.

Axel Springer is not the first news publisher to toy with the use of AI in its content creation. In January, BuzzFeed announced it planned to use artificial intelligen­ce to “enhance” its content and online quizzes.

The published of the UK’s Daily Mirror and Daily Express newspapers is also exploring the use of AI, setting up a working group to look at “the potential and limitation­s of machine-learning such as ChatGPT”, the group’s chief executive told the Financial Times.

Since its launch in November last year, ChatGPT has amassed more than 100 million users and accelerate­d a long-predicted reckoning over whether some jobs could be made redundant from artificial intelligen­ce.

The programme can generate highly sophistica­ted texts from simple user prompts, producing anything from essays and job applicatio­ns, to poems and works of fiction. ChatGPT is a large-language model, trained by uploading billions of words of everyday text from across the web into the system. It then draws on all this material to predict words and sentences in certain se-

quences.

However the accuracy of its responses has been called into question. Australian academic have found examples of the system fabricatin­g references from websites and referencin­g fake quotes.

The use of AI in journalism has proved controvers­ial as well.

Tech website CNET has reportedly been using an AI tool to generate articles that are later scanned by human editors for accuracy before publicatio­n. The website acknowledg­ed in January that the program had some limitation­s, after a report from tech news site Futurism revealed more than half of the stories generated through AI tools had to be edited for errors.

In one example, CNET was forced to issue major correction­s to an explainer article on compound interest that contained a number of simple errors.

 ?? Photograph: Andreas Gebert/Reuters ?? Axel Springer, owner of German newspapers Bild and Die Welt, has said journalist­s are at risk of being replaced by artificial intelligen­ce.
Photograph: Andreas Gebert/Reuters Axel Springer, owner of German newspapers Bild and Die Welt, has said journalist­s are at risk of being replaced by artificial intelligen­ce.

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