
-
Does "vibe coding" make everyone a programmer?
-
France's Dassault says upping Rafale warplane output
-
Pakistan charges Baloch activist with 'terrorism'
-
Pope returns home from hospital, thanks faithful
-
Tired-looking pope leaves hospital, thanks faithful
-
Chinese premier calls for 'dialogue' as US senator visits Beijing
-
China says to pursue 'correct' path of globalisation as trade woes mount
-
'Surf and turf' protest in Spain against factory, mine
-
Appeal of Vietnam death row tycoon to begin in separate case
-
Pro-Trump senator set to meet Chinese premier
-
Venezuelan migrant dreams of US national amputee soccer stardom
-
Prospect of copper mine reopening revives tensions in Panama
-
AI startup Perplexity confirms interest to buy TikTok
-
Trump admits Musk 'susceptible' on China
-
Jaguar looks to woo younger, richer drivers with $160,000 Type 00
-
Trump admits Musk 'susceptible' on China amid secret war plan row
-
Heathrow closure could cost millions, disrupt flights for days
-
EU tariffs not a deterrent, says Chinese EV maker XPeng
-
Trump suggests Tesla vandals be jailed in El Salvador
-
Russian central bank holds key rate at two-decade high
-
Namibia inaugurates its first woman president
-
Markets skid into weekend as trade fears cast a pall
-
Court rules against K-pop group NewJeans in contract dispute
-
Turkish clinics vie for UK medical tourists' custom in London
-
London's Heathrow: Europe's biggest airport
-
In Washington, glum residents struggle with Trump return
-
Japan core inflation slows to 3% in Feburary
-
Trump's call for AI deregulation gets strong backing from Big Tech
-
Italian paper prints fully-AI edition, but not to 'kill' journalism
-
In US Northwest, South Cascade is where glacier science grew up
-
Japan's core inflation rate slows to 3% in Feburary
-
Has US Education Dept impeded students? False claims by conservatives
-
Chinese electric car maker BYD aims for Europe boost
-
US refuses water request for Mexico in new battleline
-
Infants remember more than you think, new study reveals
-
Explosive Meta memoir tops US best-seller list
-
Swiss cut rates again over global economic 'uncertainty'
-
US existing home sales beat expectations in February
-
Greenpeace $660mn damages ruling shocks global NGOs
-
Oxygen detected in most distant galaxy: 'astonished' astronomers
-
BoE warns on 'economic uncertainty' as rate held
-
US denies entry to French scientist over 'hateful' messages
-
Hong Kong's embattled CK Hutchison says profits down in 2024
-
What is dark energy? One of science's great mysteries, explained
-
Most markets track Wall St gains as Fed soothes tariff fears
-
Europe shifts gears for the Trump era
-
Return of the alpha male: Why toxic masculinity is gaining prominence
-
'Musky' marsupial could solve hopping kangaroo mystery
-
Insults and acceptance: being trans in rural France
-
'It was beautiful': Mount Kenya's glaciers melting away

Italian paper prints fully-AI edition, but not to 'kill' journalism
In a world first, an Italian newspaper is printing a fully AI-generated edition for a month in what its director said Thursday was an experiment to "revitalise journalism, not to kill it".
Il Foglio, a daily broadsheet with an irreverent touch and a circulation of about 29,000, says it is the first newspaper in the world to print entire editions created through artificial intelligence, a nascent technology that is rapidly changing how newsrooms operate.
It began on Tuesday producing a four-page daily AI edition in print and online, alongside its normal edition, featuring about 22 articles and three editorials.
Put simply, the newspaper's 20-odd journalists ask a version of OpenAI's ChatGPT chatbot to write a story on a specific subject in a specific tone, and it produces a text using information scraped off the internet.
Examples this week included an analysis of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's speeches, an editorial on the recent phone call between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin -- and a fashion story.
Il Foglio's director, Claudio Cerasa, explained to AFP the idea behind the project and how it is going.
- What do you want to accomplish with this? -
"The purpose is twofold. On the one hand, to move theory into practice. On the other hand, it's to test ourselves and thus understand what the limits of AI are, but also the opportunities, the boundaries that must be overcome and those that cannot be.
"All this can spring from a special newspaper like ours, because ours is a newspaper that has irreverent, ironic, creative writing. We do things that are not easily reproducible with a machine.
"It was a desire to flaunt our being special and experiment with something that no one in the world has experimented with, in a disruptive way, creating debate, but above all, first attempting ourselves to understand how AI can be integrated with natural intelligence."
- How does the process work in practice? -
"In the editorial meeting, many topics come up. Some of these topics are then covered not only by the normal newspaper, but also by the artificial newspaper.
"Every question asked to AI contains a request for a theme... a request for a tone: respectful, irreverent, scandalous, provocative. In the end we ask it to have the style of the paper.
"If there are too many mistakes, we change articles (start a new one). If there are just few errors, though, we leave them, because we also want to understand what the limits are."
- What lessons have you learned from the first few days? -
"Artificial intelligence exceeds all expectations. We have learned it can do things that can compete with what a human does, but we have learned that in the long run competition must create greater efficiency.
"Innovation must be accepted, because you can't stop it, it must be understood, governed, and turned into an opportunity for growth.
"If one day there's a demand for articles made only with AI, it must be accepted. But that demand must increase journalists' creativity, because journalists will have to start getting used to not doing things that a machine could.
"So it's a way to revitalise journalism, not to kill it."
- Are journalists in the newsroom worried? -
"No, everyone is entertained, everyone is curious and among other things, it's interesting that with this experiment we're reaching a much larger audience. There are many people who, thanks to AI, are discovering the traditional paper. The first day we had a 60 percent rise in sales.
"It's no coincidence that no major newspaper has thought of (doing) it, because it is obviously scary. Only a newspaper like ours, which is somewhat unique, can afford to do an experiment like this."
He added: "The articles written by human beings are better, because they always have something more, they always have an element of creativity, of connection, of making unpredictable links that AI does not have."
- What are readers saying? -
"The readers are 90 percent entertained, 10 percent worried because they say 'Make sure you never leave your natural intelligence because you are better.' But there's no one who says the operation is stupid and senseless.
"Everyone has understood the spirit."
H.Cho--CPN