Four Rules of Life
/Four rules of life: Show up, Pay attention, Tell the truth, Don't be attached to the results. -Angeles Arrien
Four rules of life: Show up, Pay attention, Tell the truth, Don't be attached to the results. -Angeles Arrien
Cults do not destroy families as much as stuck-togetherness attitudes in families create candidates for cults. When parents focus on societal influence it actually serves to increase their anxiety even though it helps them avoid personal responsibility. On the other hand, parents who accept the fact that their children are less likely to be influenced by other systems to the extent that they are comfortable in their own, while they might find the idea more painful at first, are given an a means of approaching the problem that is quite within their power, and it can, in turn, contribute to their own self-respect.
Edwin Friedman, Generation to Generation
Here are the AI essentials that our experts are using, promoting and nervous about – Poynter
Historic Newspaper Uses Janky AI Newscasters Instead of Human Journalists - 404 Media
How I’m Trying to Use Generative AI as a Journalism Engineer — Ethically – The Markup
David Caswell: “All journalists should be trained to use generative AI” – Hello Future
AI companies have a news problem. Journalists have the skills they need to fix it. – Columbia Journalism Review
‘Being on camera is no longer sensible’: persecuted Venezuelan journalists turn to AI – The Guardian
How The New York Times' Granular Gen AI Tool Drives Campaign Performance – Ad Week
Meet NAT, the AI-generated presenter offering soft news to Mexican audiences – Reuters
After getting caught fabricating quotes using AI, Cody reporter resigns – Wyoming News
India’s star audio content company is going all in on AI. Will listeners tune in? – Rest of World
Two 80-something journalists tried ChatGPT. Then, they sued to protect the ‘written word’ – Associated Press
Reality Check Commentary: No News Is Bad News: Some AI Models Are Trained to Avoid News – New Guardian
CNN slashes 100 jobs as it announces major AI-focused overhaul – Raw Story
The Washington Post debuts AI chatbot – Axios
The assignment: Build AI tools for journalists – and make ethics job one – Poynter
Why video journalism is not ready to ditch its editors because of AI – Journalism.co
Google Search Ranks AI Spam Above Original Reporting in News Results – Wired
Global audiences suspicious of AI-powered newsrooms, report finds - Reuters
How AI helped a local newsroom in Argentina boost its reach, innovation and sustainability - International Journalist's Network
Fact-checkers urge collaboration, caution in using artificial intelligence tools – Poynter
How Donors Can Support Responsible AI Use in Journalism – Journalism Funders Forum
OK computer? Understanding public attitudes towards the uses of generative AI in news - Reuters
Breaking down ESPN’s decision to use AI to write some game stories – Poynter
Our standards for using AI at The Dallas Morning News – Dallas News
California announces new deal with tech to fund journalism, AI research – Associated Press
Forget your perfect offering. There is a crack in everything. That's how the light gets in. -Leonard Cohen
Generative AI is currently very good at replicating parts of software programs that have been written many times before. But what if you want to create something new? This is where smart human coders will still be needed. - BusinessInsider
I think the rise of AI is going to result more in-person sales. If everyone can do it, people will not listen or read any emails or anything like that they just stop because it’s all generated. It means every email they got is amazing. They won’t believe any of it unless somebody looks them in the eye and says, ‘I’m a real person and here’s why this is true.’ - Ronan Perceval CEO of Phorest
Given that we don’t know what the lay of the land is going to be in five, ten years there are two crucial things for publishers to focus on: what do we do that’s irreplaceable? What do we do that a machine can’t do? - Wall Street Journal editor Emma Tucker
Studies this year of ChatGPT in legal analysis and white-collar writing chores have found that the bot helps lower-performing people more than it does the most skilled. On a task that required reasoning based on evidence, however, ChatGPT was not helpful at all. Here, ChatGPT lulled employees into trusting it too much. Unaided humans had the correct answer 85 percent of the time. People who used ChatGPT without training scored just over 70 percent. Those who had been trained did even worse, getting the answer only 60 percent of the time. In interviews conducted after the experiment, “people told us they neglected to check because it’s so polished, it looks so right.’ - David Berreby writing in the New York Times
Like an episode out of Black Mirror, the machines have arrived to teach us how to be human even as they strip us of our humanity. Artificial intelligence could significantly diminish humanity, even if machines never ascend to superintelligence, by sapping the ability of human beings to do human things. “We’re seeing a general trend of selling AI as ‘empowering,’ a way to extend your ability to do something, whether that’s writing, making investments, or dating,” AI expert Leif Weatherby explained. “But what really happens is that we become so reliant on algorithmic decisions that we lose oversight over our own thought processes and even social relationships.” What makes many applications of artificial intelligence so disturbing is that they don’t expand our mind’s capacity to think, but outsource it. - Tyler Austin Harper writing in The Atlantic
As machines like A.I. eliminate routine tasks what gets left behind are the human skills we deem soft. - Jane Thier writing in Fortune
While AI is very powerful at human level or even superhuman level for many tasks, there are many other things where humans continue to have a big advantage, and that's going to continue to be true for quite some time. - Kate Whiting writing in WeForum
“Prompting AI systems is no different than being an effective communicator with other humans. The same principles apply in both cases. This makes me bullish on reading, writing, and speaking as the 3 underlying skills that really matter in 2024.” - An Open AI employee Tweet
Forget the times of your distress, but never forget what they taught you. -Herbert Gesser
From bench to bot: Does AI really make you a more efficient writer? - The Transmitter: Neuroscience News and Perspectives
Did an AI write up your arrest? Hard to know – Politico
AI Editing: Are We There Yet? - Science Editor
How do I cite generative AI in MLA style? - Modern Language Association
I tested 7 AI content detectors - they're getting dramatically better at identifying plagiarism – Zdnet
OpenAI says it’s taking a ‘deliberate approach’ to releasing tools that can detect writing from ChatGPT - Tech Crunch
AI is complicating plagiarism. How should scientists respond? – Nature
The telltale words that could identify generative AI text - Arstechnica
Research shows that AI-generated slop overuses specific words – Futurism
AI took their jobs. Now they get paid to make it sound human – BBC
AI and the Death of Student Writing – Chronicle of Higher Ed
How AI Reshapes Vocabulary: Unveiling the Most Used Terms Related to the Technology – Every Pixel
How to tell if something is written by ChatGPT – Read Write
Coursera Launches AI Plagiarism Detector – Inside Higher Ed
I Tested Three AI Essay-writing Tools, and Here’s What I Found – Life Hacker
New study on AI-assisted creativity reveals an interesting social dilemma – Psypost
How to cite ChatGPT in APA Style – American Psychological Association
Is ChatGPT a Reliable Ghostwriter? - The Journal of Nuclear Medicine
AI Is Coming for Amateur Novelists. That’s Fine. - The Atlantic
National Novel Writing Month faces backlash over allowing AI: What to know – Washington Post
How Do You Change a Chatbot’s Mind?, I discovered a new world of A.I. manipulation. – New York Times
If journalism is going up in smoke, I might as well get high off the fumes: confessions of a chatbot helper – The Guardian
College Writing Centers Worry AI Could Replace Them – EdSurge
No laughing matter - how AI is helping comedians write jokes – BBC
What Teachers Told Me About A.I. in School - New York Times
What: Learn the basic fundamentals of photography, how to take professional looking photos whether you are using a smart phone or camera, and some tips on how to market your services and products through high-quality photographs.
Who: Tyler Benninger, Video Production/Content Specialist, Duquesne University Small Business Development Center
When: 10 am, Eastern
Where: Zoom
Cost: $45
Sponsor: The Pennsylvania Business One-Stop Shop
What: A series of virtual conversations and live Q&As unpacking the policy impacts of the 2024 election. We'll dive into the profound stakes and impacts of a Trump or Harris victory, exploring how such outcomes could shape the United States' most critical sectors.
When: 2:30 pm, Eastern
Where: Zoom
Cost: Free
Sponsor: Axios
What: Discover how businesses are preparing to invest in gen AI for their marketing projects and other advanced applications to get ahead. You’ll find out: The current level of understanding and everyday use of gen AI in marketing, and how adoption is expected to evolve, insights into how other marketers plan to invest in gen AI, and the primary concerns from your peers, and how organizations are navigating the current and upcoming regulatory requirements
Who: Jonathan Moran, Head of Martech Solutions Marketing; Lisa Loftis, in the webinar Lisa Loftis Principal Product Marketing Manager, SAS.
When: 1 pm, Eastern
Where: Zoom
Cost: Free
Sponsor: AdWeek
What: An AI-powered Data Journalism Interface iTromsø, a small Norwegian newsroom that is part of the Polaris Media group, has developed an AI-powered data journalism interface called "Djinn" to enhance its newsgathering and notifications process. The tool is designed to assist journalists in finding, analyzing and summarizing news stories efficiently.
Who: Lars Adrian Giske is the Head of AI at the local Norwegian newspaper iTromsø; Rune Ytreberg has worked with data-driven journalism for 30 years, first at the investigative newsroom in the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation (NRK) and then at the daily business newspaper Dagens Næringsliv.
When: 11 am, Eastern
Where: Zoom
Cost: Free
Sponsor: Online News Association
What: We will dive into how leveraging a CDP can transform your subscription strategy. Discover how testing and learning with CDP insights can lead to better outcomes, whether it’s enhancing subscriber acquisition, boosting retention rates, or gaining efficiencies for decision making.
Who: Kyle Whitfield of The Advocate
When: 2 pm, Eastern
Where: Zoom
Cost: Free
Sponsor: Local Media Association
What: You’ll learn: How responsible generative AI is impacting government. What barriers those organizations faced in adopting AI. Who was involved in implementing the technology.
Who: Ryan R. Eddy, Director, Homeland Security Programs, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory; Kevin Johnstun, Management and Program Analyst, Office of Educational Technology; Kevin Walsh, Director, Information Technology and Cybersecurity team, GAO.
When: 2 pm, Eastern
Where: Zoom
Cost: Free
Sponsor: GovLoop
What: How to identify transferable skills; Looking for new paths/roles - understanding your values; Tips for navigating a changing path - within journalism or other complementary roles.
Who: Journalist turned life coach, Rosie Nixon
When: 8 am, Eastern
Where: Zoom
Cost: Free
Sponsor: Women in Journalism
What: When journalists publish something they accept to be true — such as the results of an election — what happens when that statement feels like unsettled opinion to some of your audience? How can you as a journalist back up the facts you’re sharing? How can you show that your work is fair, accurate and trustworthy? In this training, we’ll walk through how to bring your reporting receipts by both explaining how and why you stand for facts, and by showing how you consistently source information and stories.
When: 1 pm, Eastern
Where: Zoom
Cost: Free
Sponsor: Trusting News
What: Our discussion will start with AP reporting of the 2022 mayoral race in Shreveport, Louisiana, where the incumbent mayor faced an AI-driven deepfake attack ad. Then we will explore how AI is reshaping the political landscape locally, especially in smaller races where resources are limited. Next, some common tells of manipulated and generative AI content. The session will include time for audience questions.
Who: Dan Merica, investigative reporter, Associated Press; Ali Swenson, national political reporter, Associated Press; Beatrice Dupuy, newsgathering producer, Associated Press.
When: 1 pm, Eastern
Where: Zoom
Cost: Free
Sponsor: Associated Press
What: How to create seamless viewer experiences across multiple devices. Effective strategies for leveraging data to optimize ad placements. New strategies in maintaining viewer engagement and measuring success.
Who: Dina M. Roman, SVP, Global Advertising Sales & Operations; Fubo; Jennifer Laing, SVP, Operations, Causal IQ; Stephen Jepson President, Media Effectiveness, DISQO.
When: 1 pm, Eastern
Where: Zoom
Cost: Free
Sponsor: AdWeek
What: We will: Connect you with reporters and editors who will share the habits and practices that generate leads. Talk about keeping our eyes open and the reporting methods that turn nascent ideas into coverage that makes climate change real and relevant.
Who: The Los Angeles Times’ Tony Barboza; Canary Media’s Maria Gallucci; Nina Ignaczak at Planet Detroit and Delaney Dryfoos with The Lens.
When: 1 pm, Eastern
Where: Zoom
Cost: Free
Sponsor: Poynter and the Society of Environmental Journalists
What: A conversation around the challenges that marketing teams face during big world events and get actionable solutions and tips to navigate these complexities with confidence.
Who: Layla Revis Sprout Social; Nathan Jun Poekert Jun Social
When: 2 pm, Eastern
Where: Zoom
Cost: Free
Sponsor: Sprout Social
What: In this webinar you’ll hear big-picture ideas and hands-on, practical tips you can use today to improve your work using AI.
Who: Sree Sreenivasan, CEO, Digimentors & former Chief Digital Officer of New York City, former Columbia Journalism School professor and associate dean.
When: 3 pm, Eastern
Where: Zoom
Cost: Free
Sponsor: College Media Association
The kinder and more intelligent a person is, the more kindness he can find in other people. Kindness enriches our life; with kindness mysterious things become clear, difficult things become easy and dull things become cheerful. - Leo Tolstoy (born Sept. 9, 1828)
The forest would be quite silent if only the most beautiful birds sang.
A driver gives way to you at a place where there is no clear priority; you don’t acknowledge him. A fellow pedestrian steps into the road for you, or holds a door; you breeze on by. On holiday, you give your smallest and most worthless coins to the woman who has carefully cleaned your room. The stroppy teenager rails at the parent who scraped and saved for her. Commuters swarming in a London street never once raise their eyes to notice the splendour of a winter dawn.
No blood is spilt in any of these cases. Nothing is stolen. No one’s life is ruined. The prick of pain passes soon enough. Yet a tiny seed of ice has been sown, formed of arrogance on one side and, on the other, a sense of worthlessness. That ice spreads, and creeps into the veins and crevices of life: so that on the next occasion the door is not held, the room is cleaned carelessly, the car does not give way and the e-mail is never sent. As the opportunity for kindness is ignored, so the chance of reciprocal kindness, in the form of thanks, never comes to be. What is never given can never be repaid.
Ingratitude is the frost that nips the flower even as it opens, that shrivels the generous apple on the branch, that freezes the fountain in mid-flow and numbs the hand, even in the very act of giving. It is a sin of silence, absence and omission, as winter’s sin is a lack of light; a sin against charity, which otherwise warms the heart and, in the truest sense, makes the world turn.
Ann Wroe, writing in Intelligent Life
It is now a well-established proposition that both self-control and cognitive effort are forms of mental work. Several psychological studies have shown that people who are simultaneously challenged by a demanding cognitive task and by a temptation are more likely to yield to the temptation.
Imagine that you are asked to retain a list of seven digits for a minute or two. You are told that remembering the digits is your top priority. While your attention is focused on the digits, you are offered a choice between two desserts: a sinful chocolate cake and a virtuous fruit salad. The evidence suggests that you would be more likely to select the tempting chocolate cake when your mind is loaded with digits.
People who are cognitively busy are also more likely to make selfish choices, use sexist language, and make superficial judgments in social situations. A few drinks have the same effect, as does a sleepless night. The self-control of morning people is impaired at night; the reverse is true of night people. Too much concern about how well one is doing in a task sometimes disrupts performance by loading short-term memory with pointless anxious thoughts.
The conclusion is straightforward: self-control requires attention and effort.
Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow
Scientists to use AI to analyse 1.6m brain scans to develop tool predicting dementia risk – The Guardian
How AI Could Help Reduce Inequities in Health Care – Harvard Business Review
5 Challenges of AI in Healthcare – Unite AI
California nurses protest ‘untested’ AI as it proliferates in health care – Health Care Journalism
What accelerates brain ageing? This AI ‘brain clock’ points to answers - Nature
How AI and accelerated computing are transforming drug discovery – Financial Times
How Often Do LLMs Hallucinate When Producing Medical Summaries? -Medcity News
The testing of AI in medicine is a mess. Here’s how it should be done - Nature
A.L.S. Stole His Voice. A.I. Retrieved It. – New York Times
AI tool outperforms existing x-ray structure methods - Chemistry World
A robot just performed fully autonomous surgery on a live patient for the first time – BRG
Artificial intelligence in scientific medical writing: Legitimate and deceptive uses and ethical concerns – Science Direct
In Constant Battle With Insurers, Doctors Reach for a Cudgel: A.I. - New York Times
First ‘bilingual’ brain-reading device decodes Spanish and English words -
Google Is Using A.I. to Answer Your Health Questions. Should You Trust It? - New York Times
Reconciling privacy and accuracy in AI for medical imaging – Nature
How A.I. Is Revolutionizing Drug Development - New York Times
OpenAI and Arianna Huffington are working together on an ‘AI health coach’ – The Verge
End-of-life decisions are difficult and distressing. Could AI help? – MIT Tech Review
States are writing their own rules for AI in health care - Axios
The testing of AI in medicine is a mess. Here’s how it should be done - Nature
The sad truth is that there are some people who will only be there for you as long as you have something they need. When you no longer serve a purpose to them, they will leave. We rarely lose friends and lovers, we just gradually figure out who our real ones are. So when people walk away from you, let them go. Your destiny is never tied to anyone who leaves you. It doesn’t mean they are bad people; it just means that their part in your story is over.
Two voice actors say an A.I. company created clones of their voices without their permission. Now they’re suing. The company denies it did anything wrong. -New York Times
A former high school athletic director was arrested after allegedly using AI to impersonate the school principal in a recording that included racist and antisemitic comments. The principal was temporarily removed from the school, and waves of hate-filled messages circulated on social media, while the school received numerous phone calls. -CBS News
A researcher in Japan wanted to check if chatbots could make the same moral decisions when driving as humans. His results showed that LLMs and humans have roughly the same priorities, but some showed clear deviations… -Ars Technica
An investment firm “is designing a facial recognition system for classroom management. Multiple cameras spread throughout the room will take attendance, monitor whether students are paying attention and detect their emotional states, including whether they are bored, distracted or confused.” –Inside Higher Ed
So-called obituary pirates are “scraping and copying funeral-home websites. They're using AI for a new and lucrative tactic of creating YouTube videos and spammy websites out of the obits, capturing search traffic for people looking for information about the recently deceased.” -Business Insider
The latest recipient of one of Japan's most prestigious literary awards, the Akutagawa Prize, has admitted to using AI to write parts of her novel -The Byte
When I tested My AI earlier this year, I told the app that I was a teenager — but it still gave me advice on hiding alcohol and drugs from parents, as well tips for a highly age-inappropriate sexual encounter. -Washington Post
A central question about gen AI is whether using unattributed content written entirely by a machine — rather than by a human — counts as plagiarism. -Nature
You pay attention to the successes and failures of friends more than you do to those of strangers. You compare yourself to those who are close to you in order to judge your own worth. In other words, You know Barack Obama and Johnny Depp are successful, but you don’t use them to as a standard for your own life to the degree you do coworkers, fellow students, friends you’ve know since high school.
(Researchers) had students list the number of people they considered friends and then asked if the subjects believed they had more friends than did their peers and more friends than the average student. Thirty-five percent of the students said they had more friends than the typical student, and 23 percent said they had fewer. This better-than-average feeling was enhanced when considering their peers- 41 percent said they had more friends ship than did the peers they considered to be their friends. Only 16 percent said they had fewer. On average, everyone things they are more popular than you, and you think you are more popular than them.
Sure, some of your faults are just too obvious, even to you but you compensate for those by inflating what you like most about you. When you compare your skills, accomplishments, and friendships with those of others, you tend to accentuate the positive and eliminate the negative. You are a liar by default, and you lie most to yourself. If you fail, you forget it. IF you win, you tell everyone. When it comes to being honest with yourself and those you love, you are not so smart.
David McRaney, You are Not so Smart
Microsoft Bing Copilot blames reporter for crimes he covered - The Register
AI researchers call for ‘personhood credentials’ as bots get smarter – Washington Post
AI was responsible for the fake quotes in the Megalopolis trailer – The Verge
Trump Promotes A.I. Images to Falsely Suggest Taylor Swift Endorsed Him – New York Times
How do AI checkers actually work? - ZDnet
Watermarking in Images Will Not Solve AI-Generated Content Abuse – Data Innovation
Trump's crowd-photo claims speed AI-driven truth decay – Axios
This system can sort real pictures from AI fakes — why aren’t platforms using it? – The Verge
Secretaries of state urge Musk to fix AI chatbot spreading false election info – Washington Post
AI is complicating plagiarism. How should scientists respond? – Nature
How universities spot AI cheats – and the one word that gives it away – Telegraph
US agents shut down huge Russian AI bot farm as fears over misinformation grow – Semafor
Hunting for AI bots? These four words could do the trick – NBC News
How to Teach Kids to Spot AI Manipulation – Ed Week
OpenAI says it’s taking a ‘deliberate approach’ to releasing tools that can detect writing from ChatGPT - Tech Crunch
Tom Hanks alerts fans about AI ads using his voice to sell ‘wonder drugs’: ‘Do not be fooled’ – LA Times
The “reality’ that is left behind in all endings is not just a picture on the wall. It is a sense of which way is up and which way is down; it is a sense of which way is forward and which way is back. It is, in short, a way of orienting oneself and of moving forward into the future. In the old passage rituals, the one in transition would often be taken into unfamiliar territory, beyond the bounds of former experience, and left there for a time. All the customary signs of location would be gone, and the only remaining source of orientation would be the heavens. In such a setting and the state of mind it was meant to create, you would be (in the word’s of Robert Frost) “lost enough to find yourself.”
As with other aspects of the ending process, most of us already know disorientation. We recognize the lost, confused, don’t-know-where-I-am felling that deepens as we become disengaged, disidentified and disenchanted. The old sense of life as “going somewhere” breaks down, and we feel like shipwrecked sailors.
William Bridges, Transitions
What: This Solutions Journalism Network webinar will explore the ins and outs of solutions journalism, talk about why it’s important, explain key steps in reporting a solutions story, and share tips and resources for journalists interested in investigating how people are responding to social problems. We will also explore additional resources we have on hand for your reporting, including the Solutions Story Tracker, a database of more than 16,000 stories tagged by beat, publication, author, location, and more, a virtual heat map of what’s working around the world.
When: 9 am, Eastern
Where: Zoom
Cost: Free
Sponsor: xxx
What: Discover how AI can improve your nonprofit's website experience, from user interaction to content personalization. Learn the fundamentals of using AI for effective, data-driven marketing strategies that resonate with your audience. Explore accessible AI tools that can be easily integrated into your current website and marketing efforts.
Who: Jon Hill Tapp Network Web Project Manager; Tareq Monuar Web Developer
When: 12 pm
Where: Zoom
Cost: Free
Sponsor: TechSoup
What: Join us to learn how to: Use social media to connect with constituents. Monitor conversations to stay ahead of the curve. Get people to advocate on your behalf. Navigate social media advertising and understand when to use it.
Who: Kiersten Hill, the driving force behind Firespring’s nonprofit solutions
When: 3 pm, Eastern
Where: Zoom
Cost: Free
Sponsor: Firespring
What: Two journalists with expertise in different areas of generative AI will examine the double-edged sword AI technology presents in elections — to help journalists produce more nuanced reporting or to deceive the public with fake but hyper-realistic images, videos and audio.
Who: Zach Seward, editorial director of AI initiatives for The New York Times; Loreben Tuquero, a reporter covering misinformation and generative AI for PolitiFact.
When: 5 pm, Eastern
Where: Zoom
Cost: Free
Sponsor: Society of Professional Journalists
What: Research from Infillion on consumers’ attitudes toward ads and media buyers’ attitudes toward measuring attention. You’ll find out: How attention’s role in measuring advertising success has been upended by the collapse of the traditional purchase funnel Why ads that get the most attention often aren’t the most effective Where attention metrics fit in a holistic measurement strategy and how they can inform real-time changes in media strategy.
Who: Dasha Gorin, Director of Research, Infillion; Jen Soch, Executive Director, Channel Solutions, GroupM; Marc Guldimann, CEO & founder, Adelaide
When: 1 pm, Eastern
Where: Zoom
Cost: Free
Sponsor: Ad Tech Platform Infillion
What: In this webinar, panelists will offer tips for quality journalism in reporting the rights of children, talk about their stories and the challenges they faced working with young and vulnerable people.
Who: Hannah Dreier, investigative reporter for The New York Times; Aidan White, President of the Ethical Journalism Network; Hadeel Arja, the founder of Tinyhand, the winner of the Google News Initiative 2021; Ankush Kumar, a freelance content writer, researcher, and conference producer who has previously worked at the Economic Times and the Financial Express; Bhavya Dore, a Mumbai-based freelance journalist. Her work has appeared in the BBC and The Guardian; Cherian George, the editor and publisher of What’s Up, a Singapore newspaper for schoolchildren mostly aged 10-12; Nadia Azhgikhina, Director of PEN Moscow; Aidan White President of the Ethical Journalism Network.
When: 9 am, Eastern
Where: Zoom
Cost: Free
Sponsor: The Fetisov Journalism Awards
What: An under-the-hood session with the team behind iTromsø's Djinn, an AI-powered tool designed to streamline research and news gathering.
Who: Lars Adrian Giske is the Head of AI at the local Norwegian newspaper iTromsø. Rune Ytreberg has worked with data-driven journalism for 30 years. Since 2020 he has headed iTromsø’s data journalism lab, which uses AI to develop new editorial tools for 70 local newspapers in the Polaris Media Group in Norway.
When: 11 am, Eastern
Where: Zoom
Cost: Free
Sponsor: Online News Association
What: India’s Deepfakes Analysis Unit, winner of the most innovative collaboration at GlobalFact 11, has been at the forefront of addressing AI-generated misinformation — audio and video content — since its launch in March. This one-of-a-kind project offers a solution to how misinformation at scale spread through generative AI can be addressed by pooling in resources and expertise from across the globe — especially during India’s recently concluded federal election when the scale and volume of misinformation was massive. Join us to learn about the project and how the lessons learned through this collaboration can be replicated by newsrooms around the world.
Who: Oren Etzioni, Founder, TrueMedia.org; Pamposh Raina, Head, Deepfakes Analysis Unit of the Misinformation Combat Alliance; Jency Jacob, Managing Editor, Boom Live; Gautham Koorma, Computer Vision and Machine Learning Engineer, GetReal Labs
When: 12, Eastern
Where: Zoom
Cost: Free
Sponsor: Online News Association
What: –How Wildly Successful Nonprofits Inspire and Deliver Results.
Who: Leah Kral Senior Director of Strategy and Innovation at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University
When: 11 am, Eastern
Where: Zoom
Cost: Free
Sponsor: Challey Institute, North Dakota State University
Talk through various writing scenarios with the students.
Invite your students to have an honest discussion about these and related questions.
Split assignments into two groups: Where using AI is encouraged, and assignments where using AI can’t possibly help.
Weave ChatGPT into lessons by asking students to evaluate the chatbot’s responses.
Assign reflection to help students understand their own thought processes, motivations for using these tools, and the impact AI has on their learning and writing.
Give them the opportunity to rewrite an essay or retake a test if they don’t do well initially (students are less likely to cheat under those conditions).
Teach students to contest it. Students in every major will need to know how to challenge or defend the appropriateness of a given model for a given question.
We should be telling our undergraduates that good writing isn’t just about subject-verb agreement or avoiding grammatical errors—not even good academic writing. Good writing reminds us of our humanity, the humanity of others and all the ugly, beautiful ways in which we exist in the world.
(from a variety of articles about teaching & AI)
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