Dubai Telegraph - Italian paper prints fully-AI edition, but not to 'kill' journalism

EUR -
AED 3.951534
AFN 77.461255
ALL 98.52071
AMD 421.514487
ANG 1.940008
AOA 984.39937
ARS 1152.205787
AUD 1.707536
AWG 1.936524
AZN 1.82731
BAM 1.950781
BBD 2.173508
BDT 130.793466
BGN 1.955999
BHD 0.405514
BIF 3150.079509
BMD 1.075847
BND 1.440194
BOB 7.437897
BRL 6.173746
BSD 1.07643
BTN 92.217722
BWP 14.736084
BYN 3.522836
BYR 21086.597808
BZD 2.162237
CAD 1.534647
CDF 3088.219351
CHF 0.951261
CLF 0.025898
CLP 993.835033
CNY 7.807849
CNH 7.830341
COP 4444.893441
CRC 536.923477
CUC 1.075847
CUP 28.509941
CVE 110.38203
CZK 24.905531
DJF 191.199124
DKK 7.461352
DOP 68.104935
DZD 143.980632
EGP 54.360925
ERN 16.137702
ETB 138.945629
FJD 2.472184
FKP 0.830975
GBP 0.834494
GEL 2.990743
GGP 0.830975
GHS 16.680449
GIP 0.830975
GMD 77.428833
GNF 9306.997483
GTQ 8.292359
GYD 225.32177
HKD 8.365381
HNL 27.576213
HRK 7.538783
HTG 141.141829
HUF 397.709521
IDR 17828.966167
ILS 3.977137
IMP 0.830975
INR 92.115376
IQD 1409.635926
IRR 45248.890757
ISK 143.531818
JEP 0.830975
JMD 168.676876
JOD 0.762742
JPY 161.970871
KES 139.25973
KGS 94.342878
KHR 4308.922412
KMF 490.00206
KPW 968.262529
KRW 1576.631538
KWD 0.331719
KYD 0.89462
KZT 541.213203
LAK 23321.390369
LBP 96577.110003
LKR 319.247487
LRD 215.125487
LSL 19.611106
LTL 3.176696
LVL 0.650769
LYD 5.185741
MAD 10.308955
MDL 19.336273
MGA 5026.454966
MKD 61.20159
MMK 2258.926208
MNT 3747.189974
MOP 8.615369
MRU 42.296159
MUR 49.168435
MVR 16.615903
MWK 1867.189987
MXN 21.633951
MYR 4.772197
MZN 68.7332
NAD 19.611106
NGN 1645.566225
NIO 39.590315
NOK 11.347952
NPR 147.453688
NZD 1.877323
OMR 0.414128
PAB 1.075847
PEN 3.914443
PGK 4.386083
PHP 61.924097
PKR 301.469574
PLN 4.148514
PYG 8588.56503
QAR 3.91612
RON 4.955522
RSD 116.752011
RUB 90.805747
RWF 1528.886374
SAR 4.034631
SBD 9.142789
SCR 15.619337
SDG 645.942363
SEK 10.816715
SGD 1.437852
SHP 0.845447
SLE 24.526098
SLL 22559.971202
SOS 614.054741
SRD 39.390162
STD 22267.857191
SVC 9.413833
SYP 13988.072923
SZL 19.611106
THB 36.401127
TJS 11.731957
TMT 3.763071
TND 3.339131
TOP 2.591421
TRY 40.860275
TTD 7.315666
TWD 35.566928
TZS 2846.227105
UAH 44.816142
UGX 3943.801959
USD 1.075847
UYU 45.33204
UZS 13946.883784
VES 73.443139
VND 27571.095693
VUV 132.402601
WST 3.040857
XAF 653.33608
XAG 0.031983
XAU 0.000356
XCD 2.913304
XDR 0.810149
XOF 653.33608
XPF 119.331742
YER 264.775576
ZAR 19.647862
ZMK 9683.912389
ZMW 31.043951
ZWL 346.422239
  • CMSD

    -0.3000

    22.66

    -1.32%

  • NGG

    0.5800

    63.57

    +0.91%

  • CMSC

    -0.1100

    22.94

    -0.48%

  • BCC

    -0.5600

    100.77

    -0.56%

  • RIO

    0.0600

    62.87

    +0.1%

  • RBGPF

    -1.7000

    65.3

    -2.6%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    10.6

    +0.19%

  • BCE

    0.1200

    22.65

    +0.53%

  • BTI

    0.1100

    40.82

    +0.27%

  • GSK

    -0.2700

    38.31

    -0.7%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1600

    10.24

    -1.56%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    12.96

    -0.23%

  • BP

    0.1300

    34.42

    +0.38%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.36

    +0.11%

  • RELX

    -0.4300

    49.97

    -0.86%

  • AZN

    -0.3300

    72.72

    -0.45%

Italian paper prints fully-AI edition, but not to 'kill' journalism
Italian paper prints fully-AI edition, but not to 'kill' journalism / Photo: Justin TALLIS - AFP/File

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".

Text size:

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."

A.El-Sewedy--DT