Interdisciplinary Journal of Humanities, Media, and Political Science (IJHMPS)
DOI https://www.doi.org/10.56830/IJHMPS12202503
Authors
Abstract
Algorithmic journalism has changed the way news is made and shared, but there are still some misunderstandings about where it is going and what its place is in the media world.
Instead of going away with more chances to use general AI models, automated journalism keeps developing as a separate area with different methods and uses.
This study looks at automated journalism in a broad way that goes beyond single AI models to include how data is given, how articles are designed, and how production pipelines are set up.
Based on the study of 72 AI software systems and industry practices, this paper shows that completely independent news writing without any human help is not possible.
However, automation can cut down production times from hours to seconds and reduce costs by up to 89 percent, freeing journalists from everyday data-extracting work.
The technology covers four areas of journalism—gathering, checking, making, and sharing—allowing for data-driven reports and better audience interaction.
A close look shows big problems like bias in algorithms, spreading wrong information, losing control over what gets published, and threats to both jobs in journalism and democracy itself. Importantly, no full global rules for regulation exist.
This paper supports the idea of integrating AI as an enhancement tool under editorial control rather than replacement technology while stressing the need for policy development ethical guidelines and stakeholder education.
Careful navigation through the intersection between AI and journalism will be crucial in determining whether this technology helps improve journalistic standards while keeping ethical integrity intact within a functioning democracy.
Keywords: Journalism, Artificial Intelligence, Media
