Intelligenza artificiale e giornalismo: cosa serve per farlo bene
Gio 18 aprile 2024
16:00 - 16:50
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Artificial Intelligence (AI) is revolutionising how we gather, process, and disseminate information. The future impact of this revolution hinges on our technological choices. This panel will address critical questions: How can we ethically harness AI in journalism? What guidelines should govern its use? How can we ensure information integrity when most web content will be AI-generated? And how do we maintain editorial independence when newsrooms utilise opaque AI systems?
To tackle these issues, our panellists will discuss the foundational principles of the Paris Charter on AI and Journalism. This international ethical framework outlines how media should utilise AI systems and interact with technology companies. The charter, a product of a four-month deliberation led by Reporters Without Borders (RSF), involved 32 top-level experts and 16 global partner organisations.
Additionally, the panellists will emphasise the importance of media outlets retaining control over their AI tools, underscoring the need for technological sovereignty. This discussion will feature examples of AI systems currently in use or in development within the media industry. A particular focus will be placed on The Spinoza Project, initiated by RSF and an alliance of 300 French media outlets. This project aims to develop an open-source AI tool, created by and for journalists, to enable quick and accurate access to complex information from various sources while protecting intellectual property.
The session will conclude with a thought-provoking conversation about the long-term effects of AI on the information ecosystem. In our rapidly changing, complex world, what regulatory and political measures can be taken to ensure technology upholds the right to reliable information? Moderated by Arthur Grimonpont.
Organised in association with Reporters Without Borders.
Modificato più di un mese fa
Pagine coinvolte
Palazzo Graziani (Perugia)
Costruzione di origine medioevale Palazzo Graziani è stato sottoposto ad interventi che nel corso dei secoli ne hanno modificato ed ampliato la struttura. Situato in Corso Vannucci, l’immobile è sede della Fondazione Cassa di Risparmio ed ora anche della nuova Fondazione CARIPERUGIA ARTE. Nel 1895 Annibale Brugnoli realizzò quattro grandi quadri ad olio sulle pareti e quattro grandi dipinti murali sulla volta di quello che successivamente venne chiamato “Salone del Brugnoli”, ancora oggi la sala di maggior pregio dell’intero complesso.
Charlie Beckett
Charlie Beckett è direttore e fondatore di Polis, think thank giornalistico del Dipartimento Media e Comunicazione presso la London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). Sta dirigendo il progetto JournalismAI, che ha visto la pubblicazione nel 2019 del rapporto New powers, new responsibilities. A global survey of journalism and artificial intelligence. Ha diretto la Truth, Trust and Transparency Commission che ha prodotto il rapporto Tackling the information crisis. È stato un premiato documentarista e ha lavorato per BBC e Channel 4 News. È autore di Supermedia. Saving journalism so it can save the world (2008) e Wikileaks. News in the networked era (2012).
Arthur Grimonpont
Arthur Grimonpont is an engineer, essayist, and expert on the challenges of transition in our contemporary societies in the face of technological and environmental risks. His investigation into the role of social media in the spread of information led him to publish an essay titled Algocracy (Actes Sud, 2022). As the head of the AI and Global Challenges Desk at Reporters Without Borders (RSF), Arthur Grimonpont explores the challenges that AI poses for the right to information. In 2023, he served as the rapporteur for an international commission initiated by RSF. Under the presidency of Maria Ressa, a journalist and the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize laureate, he coordinated the drafting of the Paris Charter on AI and Journalism, the first global reference for journalistic ethics in the AI era.
Sophie Huet
Sophie Huet is Global Editor-in-chief at Agence France-Presse, the multimedia news agency covering news worldwide 24/7 in six languages. A journalist for more than 35 years, she has worked for AFP since 1991 in various assignments such as reporter in the Washington and London bureaus, news editor in Marseille, deputy news editor for France, head of the French general news department and head of the Graphics and Innovation department. She completed a multimedia training course on digital projects in 2013 at the Gobelins school in Paris. Previously Deputy of the Global News Director, she was in charge of Innovation, leading the collaborative efforts to create new products for AFP clients and new tools for the newsroom. She is a member of the Minds International Conference, a network of leading news agencies supporting digital development.
Anya Schiffrin
Anya Schiffrin is the director of the technology and media specialization at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs and a senior lecturer who teaches on global media, innovation and human rights. She writes on a number of topics related to journalism sustainability, impact and online disinformation. Her most recent book is the edited collection, Media Capture: How Money, Digital Platforms and Governments Control the News (Columbia University Press 2021). Of late, she’s been looking at government policies to support journalism globally and her most recent report is Saving Journalism 2: Global Strategies and a Look at Investigative Journalism.