AI begins reading news, creates job loss scare for journalists

AI begins reading news, creates job loss scare for journalists

New Delhi: As China’s Two Sessions - the country’s biggest political meetings of the year - kicked off on Sunday, state-run news agency Xinhua chose “Xin Xiaomeng” to make a one-minute video presentation, debuting the agency’s first Artificial Intelligence (AI)-powered news anchor and triggering renewed concerns among journalists.

Co-developed by Xinhua and tech firm Sogou Inc, the image and voice of the AI anchor who presented the news wearing a pink dress and displayed human mannerisms during the course of the presentation was modelled after Qu Meng, a real-life Xinhua news anchor.

She is, however, not the only AI-powered anchor to occupy the newsroom. Xinhua earlier introduced two male robot anchors - Qiu Hao and Xin Xiaohao. Qiu Hao has already presented 3,400 reports and garnered 10,000 minutes of screen time. Xinhua has also been experimenting with a robot reporter called “Jia Jia”.

Xinhua is also not the only news organisation to have leveraged the power of AI to scale up its production. More than 1,000 regional news titles now have access to stories jointly produced by journalists and artificial intelligence, as RADAR - the automated news service set up by PA (the Press Association) and Urbs Media - opened its trial to all of the UK’s local newsrooms last year.

RADAR was set up to meet an increasing demand for fact-based news for local communities.

It uses bespoke technology and tools for journalists, with Natural Language Generation (NLG) software at its core. When fully launched, the service aims to create tens of thousands of localised stories a month from open data sets, said the British news agency.

The service received launch funding of $805,000 in 2017 from Google’s Digital News Initiative (DNI).

In 2014, much before Xin Xiaomeng appeared on that one-minute video, the Associated Press (AP) announced in an advisory to customers that the majority of the US corporate earnings stories for its business news report would eventually be produced using automation technology. Using the Wordsmith platform from US-based tech firm Automated Insights, AP could produce 15 times more quarterly earnings stories than what it was doing with manual efforts. Wordsmith uses natural language generation to turn data into a written, plain-language narrative. There is, in fact, now no dearth of tools that can automate content creation for news organisations. (IANS)

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