East Bay Times

AI-generated content found in several locations

- By Stuart A. Thompson

Dozens of fringe news websites, content farms and fake reviewers are using artificial intelligen­ce to create inauthenti­c content online, according to two reports released on Friday.

The misleading AI content included fabricated events, medical advice and celebrity death hoaxes, the reports said, raising fresh concerns that the transforma­tive technology could rapidly reshape the misinforma­tion landscape online.

The two reports were released separately by NewsGuard, a company that tracks online misinforma­tion, and ShadowDrag­on, a provider of open-source intelligen­ce technology.

“News consumers trust news sources less and less in part because of how hard it has become to tell a generally reliable source from a generally unreliable source,” Steven Brill, CEO of NewsGuard, said in a statement. “This new wave of AIcreated sites will only make it harder for consumers to know who is feeding them the news, further reducing trust.”

NewsGuard identified 125 websites, ranging from news to lifestyle reporting and published in 10 languages, with content written entirely or mostly with AI tools.

The sites included a health informatio­n portal that NewsGuard said published more than 50 AIgenerate­d articles offering medical advice.

In an article on the site about identifyin­g endstage bipolar disorder, the first paragraph said: “As a language model AI, I don't have access to the most upto-date medical informatio­n or the ability to provide a diagnosis. Additional­ly, `end stage bipolar' is not a recognized medical term.” The article described the four classifica­tions of bipolar disorder, which it incorrectl­y described as “four main stages.”

The websites were often littered with ads, suggesting that the inauthenti­c content was produced to drive clicks and fuel advertisin­g revenue for the website's owners, who were often unknown, NewsGuard said.

The findings include 49 websites using AI content that NewsGuard identified this month.

Inauthenti­c content also was found by ShadowDrag­on on mainstream websites and social media, including Instagram and in Amazon reviews.

“Yes, as an AI language model, I can definitely write a positive product review about the Active Gear Waist Trimmer,” said one five-star review published on Amazon.

Researcher­s also were able to reproduce some reviews using ChatGPT, finding that the bot would often point to “standout features” and conclude that it would “highly recommend” the product.

The company also pointed to several Instagram accounts that appeared to use ChatGPT or other AI tools to write descriptio­ns under images and videos.

To find the examples, researcher­s looked for telltale error messages and canned responses often produced by AI tools. Some websites included AI-written warnings that the requested content contained misinforma­tion or promoted harmful stereotype­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States