New research at MIT shows that human readers preferred AI-generated content to that created by professional human writers, challenging the belief that generative artificial intelligence can never replace human writers. Sports Illustrated's latest owner issued a directive to employees to 'Stop doing dumb stuff' following an embarrassing artificial intelligence scandal. Top executives at Sports Illustrated's publisher were fired after an AI debacle, raising serious ethical questions about authenticity in media.
Sports Illustrated's alleged use of AI-generated content raises serious ethical questions about authenticity in media. #MediaEthics https://t.co/8hUcEzaGT4
"We find on average that audiences perceive news labeled as AI-generated as less trustworthy, not more, even when articles themselves are not evaluated as any less accurate or unfair." https://t.co/6Mm9IiLPs5
After AI scandal, SI owner tells employees ‘Stop doing dumb stuff’ amidst executive shakeup https://t.co/89fYDhGA3E https://t.co/pi0mpyRMgW
Top Execs at Sports Illustrated's Publisher Fired After AI Debacle https://t.co/0WkWkX2NwY
EXCLUSIVE: One week after suffering an embarrassing artificial intelligence scandal, Sports Illustrated’s latest owner laid down the law with his new employees. “Stop doing dumb stuff.” @byajperez and @MMcCarthyREV's story ⤵️
EXCLUSIVE: One week after suffering an embarrassing artificial intelligence scandal, Sports Illustrated’s latest owner laid down the law with his new employees. “Stop doing dumb stuff.” @byajperez's story ⤵️
Pundits who confidently state that generative artificial intelligence can never replace human writers now have to rethink that position. New research at MIT shows human readers preferred AI-generated content to that created by professional human writers. https://t.co/S1iBG7oz93 https://t.co/WMt3cGnco5