Newsrooms - Media Helping Media https://mediahelpingmedia.org Free journalism and media strategy training resources Sat, 28 Sep 2024 07:35:37 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://mediahelpingmedia.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/cropped-MHM_Logo-32x32.jpeg Newsrooms - Media Helping Media https://mediahelpingmedia.org 32 32 The role of AI in the newsroom https://mediahelpingmedia.org/advanced/the-role-of-ai-in-the-newsroom/ Thu, 02 Nov 2023 09:35:06 +0000 https://mediahelpingmedia.org/?p=2859 Three excellent free training resources designed to help newsrooms "learn about the opportunities" and "support and grow all aspects of a news operation" by embracing AI.

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Image by 6eo tech https://www.flickr.com/photos/6eotech/ released via Creative Commons CC BY 2.0 DEED
Image by 6eo tech released via Creative Commons CC BY 2.0 DEED

Below are three excellent free training resources designed to help newsrooms “learn about the opportunities” and “support and grow all aspects of a news operation” by embracing AI.

They also include “writing guidelines for the role of AI in the newsroom.” The material has been produced by the AP, the LSE, and NiemanLab.

According to the AP, its course is “based on findings from AP’s research with local U.S. newsrooms and is designed for local news journalists and managers at all levels.”

The AP guide is designed to “Get your newsroom ready to incorporate technologies that include artificial intelligence to support and grow all aspects of your news operation.”

View the AP course.

In the first video in the AP’s course (link above), Jim Kennedy talks about how AP uses AI for “streamlining workflows and freeing journalists to focus on higher-order work” by “removing the grunt work that bogged down the news process every day”. Jim mentions how with some data-heavy journalism, such as sports stats and company financial results, content production increased tenfold.

The London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) course is “a guide designed to help news organisations learn about the opportunities offered by AI to support their journalism”.

The LSE says its guide will help news organisation decide how to embrace AI journalism “to make your work more efficient and serve your audiences better”.

View the LSE’s guide.

The NiemanLab has produced “Writing guidelines for the role of AI in the newsroom.” It says the material sets out “the importance of meaningful human involvement and supervision in the use of AI, including through additional editing and factchecking of outputs before publication”.

View the NiemanLab suggested guidelines.

For more background on the development of AI and how it impacts news, you might want to view David Caswell’s presentation on “Generative AI and Automation of Media”.

David Caswell is the founder of StoryFlow Ltd., an innovation consultancy focused on AI workflows in news production. He was formerly an Executive Product Manager at BBC News Labs, focused on AI-based new product initiatives. He previously led product management for machine learning at Tribune Publishing and the Los Angeles Times, and was Director of Product Management for Automated Content Understanding at Yahoo!. David has also researched and published extensively on computational, structured and automated forms of journalism, including as a Fellow at the Reynolds Journalism Institute at the Missouri School of Journalism.

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Content sharing for the benefit of all https://mediahelpingmedia.org/strategy/content-sharing-for-the-benefit-of-all/ Wed, 21 Dec 2022 13:44:37 +0000 https://mediahelpingmedia.org/?p=2513 Small news organisations, eager to offer their audience a wider choice of news, can now take advantage of a free international wires service currently syndicating in 90 languages.

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Online editors in Vietnam - image by Media Helping Media released by Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 4.0
Online editors in Vietnam – image by Media Helping Media released by Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 4.0

Small news organisations, eager to offer their audience a wider choice of news, can now take advantage of a free international wires service currently syndicating in 90 languages.

Open Newswire is a feed of news, current affairs, and magazine articles written by professional journalists from around the world which editors can republish in their own news organisation’s output – subject to the conditions of various Creative Commons licences or similar public domain guidelines.

Benefits

There are several benefits for news organisations who use the service and those who contribute to the service.

  • Small newsrooms can enhance their content offering and attract more page views with quality content for no charge.
  • Newsrooms can reach a wider audience when their content is syndicated.
  • If a news organisation, big or small, publishes content under certain Creative Commons or Public Domain licences (which require a link back to the original source) it has the potential benefit of return traffic.

How it works

Screenshot of the Open Newswire feed with English language articles selected
Screenshot of the Open Newswire feed with English language articles selected

A continuously updated list of news feeds can be filtered by language so that editors can browse through stories relevant to their audience.

They then select the story to copy taste, and, if they feel the article would be beneficial to their audience they can publish the piece in their own newsroom content management system so that it has the look and feel of the rest of their output.

Alongside each item in the feed is a link to the various licence conditions. All the editor needs to do is check those conditions and comply. Once those conditions are met the editor is free to publish.

Creative Commons and public domain

Some Creative Commons licences might allow the article to be edited, others might not. This is usually indicated by the letters ND (No Derivatives), which means you can use the content but are not allowed to alter it. Others might include the letters BY (who it is by) which means you must attribute the original creator of the work. Some articles have other conditions – which are all set out alongside the particular news story so that editors can be sure they comply with the terms and conditions.

The Open Newswire blog has a helpful page explaining what the different licences mean. There is also a link to easy to follow rules about the attribution of photographs.

Open Newswire is non-commercial and entirely self-funded by Australian journalist Zac Crellin – who posts updates on Mastodon and Twitter. He says the goal is not about making money, but about sharing content in order to “help small newsrooms all over the world that can’t afford a subscription” to the main news aggregators.


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