Home run D.

 

REH

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of D & N
Sent: Thursday, July 12, 2012 8:09 PM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
Subject: Re: [Futurework] Automating journalism

 

Great! Newspeak! Play that word any way you want to.  One small step for
news media. One giant step for propaganda.

D.

On 12/07/2012 4:54 PM, Arthur Cordell wrote:


New reporter? Call him Al, for algorithm


*       by Rob Lever 

The new reporter on the US media scene takes no coffee breaks, churns out
articles at lightning speed, and has no pension plan.

That's because the reporter is not a person, but a computer algorithm, honed
to translate raw data such as corporate earnings reports and previews or
sports statistics into readable prose.

Algorithms are producing a growing number of articles for newspapers and
websites, such as this one produced by Narrative Science:

"Wall Street is high on Wells Fargo, expecting it to report earnings that
are up 15.7 percent from a year ago when it reports its second quarter
earnings on Friday, July 13, 2012," said the article on Forbes.com.

While computers cannot parse the subtleties of each story, they can take
vast amounts of raw data and turn it into what passes for news, analysts
say.

"This can work for anything that is basic and formulaic," says Ken Doctor,
an analyst with the media research firm Outsell.

And with media companies under intense financial pressure, the move to
automate some news production "does speak directly to the rebuilding of the
cost economics of journalism," said Doctor.

Stephen Doig, a journalism professor at Arizona State University who has
used computer systems to sift through data which is then provided to
reporters, said the new computer-generated writing is a logical next step.

"I don't have a philosophical objection to that kind of writing being
outsourced to a computer, if the reporter who would have been writing it
could use the time for something more interesting," Doig said.

Scott Frederick, chief operating officer of Automated Insights, another firm
in the sector, said he sees this as "the next generation of content
creation."

The company got its start in 2007 as StatSheet, which generates news stories
from raw feeds of play-by-play data from major sports events.

The company generates advertising on its own website and is now beginning to
sell its services to other organizations for sports and real estate news.

"Over the next 12 to 24 months, every media property will need some
automation strategy," Frederick told AFP.

To mimic the effect of the hometown newspaper, the company generates
articles with a different "tonality" depending on the reader's preference or
location.

For the 2012 Super Bowl, the article for New York Giants' fans read like
this: "Hakeem Nicks had a big night, paving the way to a victory for the
Giants over the Patriots, 21-17 in Indianapolis. With the victory, New York
is the champion of Super Bowl XLVI."

For New England fans, the story was different: "Behind an average day from
Tom Brady, the Patriots lost to the Giants, 21-17 at home. With the loss,
New England falls short of a Super Bowl ring."

"Data becomes the seeds of the content trees. When you can create an entire
story out of raw data, that is technologically impressive," Frederick said.

Kristian Hammond, chief technology officer at Chicago-based Narrative
Science, said he had been involved in computer content generation for more
than a decade.

Hammond is on leave from Northwestern University, where he was on the
computer science faculty and headed a joint project generating content with
the university's journalism school.

The company formed in 2010 has 40 clients including Forbes, and some
corporate clients which use the technology to take spreadsheets or other
data for internal reports that are more readable.

"We're about two-thirds engineering and one-third journalism," he said.

"We knew there were places in traditional journalism where raw data was used
as the driver for telling stories, and we wanted to take that model and turn
it into something a machine can do," he told AFP.

While some articles are reviewed by editors, others are automatically
delivered without human intervention because of client preference or because
the task is too voluminous: Narrative Science, he said, produced stories on
370,000 Little League baseball games in the past year.

The computers cannot pick up on certain things, such as if an injury or
weather affects the game.

"If it's not in the data, we can't say anything about it. We're very aware
of that, but more of what goes on is data-driven," Hammond said.

"The feedback has been very positive. We haven't done anything goofy or
embarrassing so far."

One goof came from a company called Journatic, a partner of the Chicago
Tribune, which uses a combination of human editors in the US and overseas
and computer algorithms to generated "hyperlocal" news.

Some news organizations complained when they discovered the "bylines"
generated were made-up names, not real journalists, in the Tribune, Houston
Chronicle and San Francisco Chronicle, a violation of ethics policies for
the dailies.

Journatic chief executive Brian Timpone said the flap stemmed from a
misunderstanding with news clients and the fact that bylines were needed to
be seen on Google News.

"We're taking them off," Timpone said, arguing that should not distract
attention from the business model which can help media companies.

"The way news is produced has not changed in 50 years," he told AFP.

Timpone said his company can produce news more efficiently "with technology,
lots of local news gathering, and a distributed writing team."

"It's not about algorithms. Algorithms only work if the data is structured.
There's no way to automate everything."

http://ca.news.yahoo.com/reporter-call-him-al-algorithm-190751150.html

 

 






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