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Italian Newspaper Claims It Has Published World's First AI-Generated Edition

The Guardian

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Date Published
17 Mar 2025
Priority Score
2
Australian
No
Created
18 Mar 2025, 03:50 pm

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Il Foglio says artificial intelligence used ‘for everything – the writing, the headlines, the quotes … even the irony’

Summary

An Italian newspaper, Il Foglio, has claimed to publish the world's first entirely AI-generated edition, with artificial intelligence responsible for all aspects from writing to headlines. This experiment demonstrates the potential impact of AI on journalism and highlights the evolving roles of journalists tasked with interacting with AI tools. Though innovative, the paper does not directly tackle existential risks or catastrophic scenarios associated with artificial intelligence. This development reflects ongoing global experiments in integrating AI into traditional industries, raising questions about the future of jobs and human roles in news media.

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Journalists’ tasks on the AI version of Il Foglio are limited to ‘asking questions [into an AI tool] and reading the answers’.View image in fullscreenJournalists’ tasks on the AI version of Il Foglio are limited to ‘asking questions [into an AI tool] and reading the answers’.Italian newspaper says it has published world’s first AI-generated editionIl Foglio says artificial intelligence used ‘for everything – the writing, the headlines, the quotes … even the irony’An Italian newspaper has said it is the first in the world to publish an edition entirely produced by artificial intelligence.The initiative by Il Foglio, a conservative liberal daily, is part of a month-long journalistic experiment aimed at showing the impact AI technology has “on our way of working and our days”, the newspaper’s editor, Claudio Cerasa, said.The four-page Il Foglio AI has been wrapped into the newspaper’s slim broadsheet edition, and is available on newsstands andonlinefrom Tuesday.“It will be the first daily newspaper in the world on newsstands created entirely using artificial intelligence,” said Cerasa. “For everything. For the writing, the headlines, the quotes, the summaries. And, sometimes, even for the irony.” He added that journalists’ roles would be limited to “asking questions [into an AI tool] and reading the answers”.LA Times to display AI-generated political rating on opinion piecesRead moreThe experiment comes as news organisations around the world grapple with how AI should be deployed. Earlier this month, the Guardianreportedthat BBC News was to use AI to give the public more personalised content.The front page of the first edition of Il Foglio AI carries a story referring to the US president, Donald Trump, describing the “paradox of Italian Trumpians” and how they rail against “cancel culture” yet either turn a blind eye, or worse, “celebrate” when “their idol in the US behaves like the despot of a banana republic”.The front page also features a column headlined “Putin, the 10 betrayals”, with the article highlighting “20 years of broken promises, torn-up agreements and words betrayed” by Vladimir Putin, the Russian president.In a rare upbeat story about the Italian economy, another article points to the latest report from Istat, the national statistics agency, on the redistribution of income, which shows the country “is changing, and not for the worse” with salary increases for about 750,000 workers being among the positive effects of income tax reforms.On page 2 is a story about “situationships” and how young Europeans are fleeing steady relationships.The articles were structured, straightforward and clear, with no obvious grammatical errors.However, none of the articles published in the news pages directly quote any human beings.skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotionThe final page runs AI-generated letters from readers to the editor, with one asking whether AI will render humans “useless” in the future. “AI is a great innovation, but it doesn’t yet know how to order a coffee without getting the sugar wrong,” reads the AI-generated response.Cerasa said Il Foglio AI reflected “a real newspaper” and was the product of “news, debate and provocations”. But it was also a testing ground to show how AI could work “in practice”, he said, while seeing what the impact would be on producing a daily newspaper with the technology and the questions “we are forced to ask ourselves, not only from a journalistic nature”.“It is just another [Il] Foglio made with intelligence, don’t call it artificial,” Cerasa said.Explore more on these topicsArtificial intelligence (AI)ItalyNewspapers & magazinesNewspapersEuropenewsShareReuse this content