Nineteen staffers affected, according to Washington Post, with celebrated magazine to end newsstand sales

    • Already in progress, I note. Only a month ago CNET took stock of how they handled their AI-generated articles after discovering 53% of them to be riddled with errors. In April the German tabloid Die Aktuelle was forced to fire their editor-in-chief after publishing an AI-generated interview with the reclusive former F1 racer Michael Schumacher.

      Schumacher had been very protective of his private life even before retirement, and in 2013 suffered a paralyzing brain injury that left him struggling to communicate at all. Understandably, his family sued.

      But I’m sure the promise of free content churned out lightning fast to please an eager and overly-trusting audience won’t be something that worms its tentacles into every publication

      /s