Zürcher Nachrichten - Italian paper prints fully-AI edition, but not to 'kill' journalism

EUR -
AED 3.999581
AFN 78.450719
ALL 98.465685
AMD 428.409662
ANG 1.949364
AOA 997.435867
ARS 1184.984416
AUD 1.814614
AWG 1.960026
AZN 1.821666
BAM 1.942693
BBD 2.212275
BDT 133.121871
BGN 1.942693
BHD 0.413014
BIF 3256.529276
BMD 1.088904
BND 1.464817
BOB 7.570922
BRL 6.364205
BSD 1.095608
BTN 93.474359
BWP 15.260046
BYN 3.585609
BYR 21342.50916
BZD 2.200852
CAD 1.551393
CDF 3128.420054
CHF 0.932374
CLF 0.027114
CLP 1040.490158
CNY 7.928905
CNH 7.95296
COP 4553.479184
CRC 554.260587
CUC 1.088904
CUP 28.855944
CVE 109.526064
CZK 25.222254
DJF 195.113633
DKK 7.443973
DOP 69.193177
DZD 145.096085
EGP 55.798357
ERN 16.333553
ETB 144.412795
FJD 2.520707
FKP 0.843389
GBP 0.847726
GEL 2.994396
GGP 0.843389
GHS 16.982425
GIP 0.843389
GMD 77.860688
GNF 9482.027899
GTQ 8.455951
GYD 229.223505
HKD 8.466259
HNL 28.032872
HRK 7.482621
HTG 143.362779
HUF 406.377162
IDR 18233.689586
ILS 4.075902
IMP 0.843389
INR 93.133377
IQD 1435.316396
IRR 45842.837943
ISK 143.919915
JEP 0.843389
JMD 172.794215
JOD 0.771918
JPY 158.487185
KES 141.614573
KGS 94.482851
KHR 4386.406369
KMF 490.570932
KPW 980.013184
KRW 1589.265482
KWD 0.335153
KYD 0.91304
KZT 555.522077
LAK 23731.888807
LBP 98170.972965
LKR 324.858289
LRD 219.131592
LSL 20.89324
LTL 3.215249
LVL 0.658667
LYD 5.299248
MAD 10.4348
MDL 19.360382
MGA 5080.722051
MKD 61.122626
MMK 2285.98064
MNT 3819.973698
MOP 8.771323
MRU 43.695203
MUR 48.641574
MVR 16.702071
MWK 1899.882125
MXN 22.404298
MYR 4.831438
MZN 69.591243
NAD 20.89324
NGN 1669.093044
NIO 40.317988
NOK 11.707014
NPR 149.558975
NZD 1.952562
OMR 0.418924
PAB 1.095708
PEN 4.026038
PGK 4.522488
PHP 62.48678
PKR 307.578569
PLN 4.269172
PYG 8783.739022
QAR 3.993954
RON 4.933305
RSD 116.364924
RUB 93.034477
RWF 1578.947365
SAR 4.086443
SBD 9.055683
SCR 15.625876
SDG 653.886002
SEK 11.003174
SGD 1.466677
SHP 0.855707
SLE 24.773018
SLL 22833.763722
SOS 626.175402
SRD 39.904505
STD 22538.104554
SVC 9.587318
SYP 14157.745713
SZL 20.900988
THB 37.492026
TJS 11.926238
TMT 3.811162
TND 3.355164
TOP 2.550321
TRY 41.346217
TTD 7.421927
TWD 36.127098
TZS 2931.025343
UAH 45.096549
UGX 4004.979728
USD 1.088904
UYU 46.34731
UZS 14156.490846
VES 76.399121
VND 28099.155555
VUV 132.974194
WST 3.048468
XAF 651.561133
XAG 0.036798
XAU 0.000358
XCD 2.942816
XDR 0.810333
XOF 651.561133
XPF 119.331742
YER 267.489244
ZAR 20.86203
ZMK 9801.434635
ZMW 30.377056
ZWL 350.626492
  • NGG

    -3.4600

    65.93

    -5.25%

  • RIO

    -3.7600

    54.67

    -6.88%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    22.29

    +0.13%

  • BTI

    -2.0600

    39.86

    -5.17%

  • GSK

    -2.4800

    36.53

    -6.79%

  • AZN

    -5.4600

    68.46

    -7.98%

  • RYCEF

    -1.5500

    8.25

    -18.79%

  • SCS

    -0.0600

    10.68

    -0.56%

  • RBGPF

    69.0200

    69.02

    +100%

  • VOD

    -0.8700

    8.5

    -10.24%

  • BCC

    0.8100

    95.44

    +0.85%

  • BCE

    0.0500

    22.71

    +0.22%

  • BP

    -2.9600

    28.38

    -10.43%

  • RELX

    -3.2800

    48.16

    -6.81%

  • JRI

    -0.8600

    11.96

    -7.19%

  • CMSD

    0.1600

    22.83

    +0.7%

Advertisement Image
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".

Advertisement Image

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.Weber--NZN

Advertisement Image