Radio Free Asia suspends news operations amid US funding freeze CPJ calls on Pakistan to prosecute killers of journalist Imtiaz Mir PFUJ urges quashing of fabricated case against journalist Matiullah Jan PSL vs IPL: Franchise valuation gap reveals PCB's catastrophic mismanagement NewsOne TV hit by layoffs and unpaid wages, channel remains on air India proposes strict rules to label AI-generated media and deepfakes Vietnam detains BBC journalist, holds passport amid UK visit by Hanoi leader Senegal media crackdown: 7TV Director Maimouna Ndour Faye arrested in live broadcast raid Kyrgyzstan declares outlets Kloop and Temirov Live ‘extremist’ in unprecedented crackdown Babar Azam's form slump: Inside the psychological battle and classical crisis of Pakistan's cricket maestro
Journalism Pakistan
Journalism Pakistan

Italian newspaper embraces AI, praises its irony and insight

 JournalismPakistan.com |  Published 6 months ago |  Reuters

Join our WhatsApp channel

Italian newspaper embraces AI, praises its irony and insight

ROME- Artificial intelligence can write a great book review and is good at irony, but it won't replace quality journalism, said the editor of an Italian newspaper at the forefront of AI experimentation.

In what it said was a world first, Il Foglio put out a four-page daily insert for one month that was written entirely by AI and was sold together with the normal newspaper.

The trial, which has just ended, was a big success and boosted sales, editor Claudio Cerasa said, adding that his paper will now publish a separate section once a week written by AI.

He said he would also use AI to write the occasional article in areas where Il Foglio, a small conservative newspaper with 22 staffers, didn't have the expertise, such as a piece published on Friday on astronomy.

However, he insisted AI programmes would not lead to job losses in his newsroom."Some publishers see AI as a way to have fewer journalists and more machines. That is very wrong and self-harming. The fundamental thing is to understand what you can do more of, not less," Cerasa told a small group of foreign journalists.

Cerasa said AI would create jobs for people who knew how to ask the right questions and get the most out of the technology, but predicted it would also boost high-quality journalism by forcing reporters to dig deeper and be more original.

"Writers will be compelled to find new elements to be more creative and relatable," he said. Cerasa interacted daily with his AI programme and was often surprised by the results. "The most mysterious thing, the most incredible thing, was its sense of irony was immediately genuine," Cerasa said. "If you ask it to write an ironic article on any topic, AI knows how to do it."

He added that the AI was also adept at producing book reviews, capable of analysing 700-page tomes and generating insightful critiques in just minutes.
It needed to be told whether to give the review a positive or negative spin, which turned it into a "hitman" at the command of whoever was at the keyboard.
This lack of critical thinking was a handicap, he said. "If you give a journalist guidance for an article, for me it's good to hear them say 'no', to hear them disagree with you. This discussion is fundamental but doesn't happen with AI."

He also noted the occasional factual errors and said it did not always update its knowledge base, citing its persistent refusal to register that U.S. President Donald Trump had won re-election in 2024.

 

Explore Further

Newsroom
Radio Free Asia suspends news operations amid US funding freeze

Radio Free Asia suspends news operations amid US funding freeze

 October 31, 2025 Radio Free Asia, a US government-funded broadcaster covering tightly controlled Asian media environments, has suspended all news operations after federal funding dried up.


Why was this DawnNews TV journalist targeted in a foiled murder plot?

Why was this DawnNews TV journalist targeted in a foiled murder plot?

 October 31, 2025 Police foiled a plot to kill DawnNewsTV journalist Tahir Naseer in Rawalpindi after arresting suspects hired for Rs200,000. Naseer says threats followed his reporting.


CPJ calls on Pakistan to prosecute killers of journalist Imtiaz Mir

CPJ calls on Pakistan to prosecute killers of journalist Imtiaz Mir

 October 31, 2025 CPJ calls on Pakistan to bring Imtiaz Mir’s killers to justice after the journalist was allegedly murdered by a banned militant group in Karachi.


PFUJ urges quashing of fabricated case against journalist Matiullah Jan

PFUJ urges quashing of fabricated case against journalist Matiullah Jan

 October 30, 2025 The PFUJ has condemned a fabricated drug case against journalist Matiullah Jan, calling it an attempt to silence him and urging authorities to quash the charges immediately.


PSL vs IPL: Franchise valuation gap reveals PCB's catastrophic mismanagement

PSL vs IPL: Franchise valuation gap reveals PCB's catastrophic mismanagement

 October 30, 2025 PSL franchise fees lag far behind IPL's USD 18.5B valuation as Pakistan Cricket Board's bureaucratic grip stifles growth. Hard numbers expose a stark reality.