The New York Times has just approved the use of artificial intelligence tools to edit text, summarizing information, coding and writing. According to Samfour, the New York Times in an internal email has announced that staff and editorial staff are postponing artificial intelligence training courses.
According to the report, a new tool called the Echo has been introduced by the New York Times to summarize articles, reports and other editorial activities.
New York Times use the ECHO tool to produce news content
Employees are said to have received new instructions on how to use ECHO and other artificial intelligence tools. According to these guidelines, reporters can use these tools to propose text editing and modify texts, generating news summaries, writing advertising texts for social networks, and creating optimal titles for search engines.
There are also some restrictions, and reporters are not allowed to use artificial intelligence to write or change articles, bypass payment barriers, use copyright content, or publish artificial intelligence images and videos without labeling.
It is still unclear how much the New York Times will use artificial intelligence edited texts in its articles. In a note last year, the New York Times articles would always write and edit expert reporters, and a few months later confirmed the commitment.
The guidelines for using artificial intelligence in the New York Times approved May 2024 were as follows:
“Productive artificial intelligence can help us in parts of the work process, but management and monitoring will always be the responsibility of reporters. We are always responsible for our reports, no matter how they are produced. Any use of artificial intelligence must begin with the information that reporters have approved. In the next step, the editors must review them. “
In addition to the ECO, the New York Times has apparently confirmed the use of other tools, including Github Copilot for programming, Google Vertex AI for product development, Google Notebooklm, dedicated Times, and some Amazon artificial intelligence products.
These new tools and educational guidelines have been presented when the New York Times is still involved in lawsuits with Openai and Microsoft. The newspaper claims that ChatGpt has used its content to teach without permission. Many other media are also experimenting with artificial intelligence.
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