Real AI News? Yes, with Fact Checking, Original Research, and Ethics Too
February 17, 2025
This blog post is the work of a real-live dinobaby. No smart software involved.
This is “real” news… if the story is based on fact checking, original research, and those journalistic ethics pontifications. Let’s assume that these conditions of old-fashioned journalism to apply. This means that the story “New York Times Goes All-In on Internal AI Tools” pinpoints a small shift in how “real” news will be produced.
The write up asserts:
The New York Times is greenlighting the use of AI for its product and editorial staff, saying that internal tools could eventually write social copy, SEO headlines, and some code.
Yep, some. There’s ground truth (that’s an old-fashioned journalism concept) in blue-chip consulting. The big money maker is what’s called scope creep. Stated simply, one starts small like a test or a trial. Then if the sky does not fall as quickly as some companies’ revenue, the small gets a bit larger. You check to make sure the moon is in the sky and the revenues are not falling, hopefully as quickly as before. Then you expand. At each step there are meetings, presentations, analyses, and group reassurances from others in the deciders category. Then — like magic! — the small project is the rough equivalent of a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier.
Ah, scope creep.
Understate what one is trying. Watch it. Scale it. End up with an aircraft carrier scale project. Yes, it is happening at an outfit like the New York Times if the cited article is accurate.
What scope creep stage setting appears in the write up? Let look:
- Staff will be trained. You job, one assumes, is safe. (Ho ho ho)
- AI will help uncover “the truth.” (Absolutely)
- More people will benefit (Don’t forget the stakeholders, please)
What’s the write up presenting as actual factual?
The world’s greatest newspaper will embrace hallucinating technology, but only a little bit.
Scope creep begins, and it won’t change a thing, but that information will appear once the cost savings, revenue, and profit data become available at the speed of newspaper decision making.
Stephen E Arnold, February 17, 2025
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