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Robot attack: Why journalism professor Nicholas Diakopoulos doesn’t fear the automation of newsrooms | DIGIDAY

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‘We should not be so afraid of jobs going away as much as jobs changing, new roles and new tasks emerging.’ 

Writing templates for automated news systems is emerging as a new skillset, says Professor Nicholas Diakopolous. In a brief interview with Digiday, he says these kinds of new tasks will shape the future of journalism.

Journalists assisted by AI tools will be more evident than AI systems taking over from human journalists.

Journalists and AI systems are co-evolving to handle complementary tasks. Diakopolous sees more hybrid workflows ahead.

Before autoscribe systems can churn out stories by the thousands, the underlying logic needs to be written as a template. This requires human news judgment and anticipating future story scenarios that can be derived from a data set. As well as automated writing, AI systems can tailor layouts and news line-ups to better match existing content with user interest, he says.

Diakopolous heads the Computational Journalism Lab at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. His 2019 book, Automating the News: How Algorithms Are Rewriting the Media, is often cited as a leading source.

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Robot attack: Why journalism professor Nicholas Diakopoulos doesn’t fear the automation of newsrooms
DIGIDAY | January 20, 2019 | by Deanna Ting

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