Sports Illustrated’s website, beneath the quality articles from its remaining magazine staff, is a content mill with little to no quality control. Freelancers paid very little churn out content on team-oriented sites, slap the Sports Illustrated name on the articles, and post them on various social media outlets to chase clicks. These sub-sites aren’t about journalism or quality, but hitting quotas. It’s a cynical play, but not an unfamiliar one.But AdVon Commerce, the content mill SI used to come up with the bogus content, went beyond just providing the "written" word.
In the case of the AI articles that were scrubbed, they were affiliate-link partnerships so deep on the site, most of Sports Illustrated’s actual editors did not know they even existed — and there was little to no oversight from those in charge of the content farms. (Source: Boston Globe)
...an assortment of articles bylined by writers who didn’t exist — with accompanying headshots that originated on a website selling images generated by Artificial Intelligence.
Bylined articles? Fake writers? Bogus headshots?
Even if no one reads the articles, this is pretty scandalous behavior.
AdVon, the outfit that produced the fake crap, claims on their website that "We Don’t Capture Value, We CREATE Value."
Well, value for themselves I guess.
(...It licensed publishing rights to Arena Group, which outsourced some content to third-party company AdVon. Arena Group pinned the situation on AdVon, so it also outsources blame, apparently.)
AdVon, for their party, supposedly told Arena that "the posts were written by humans but that they had used a pseudonym to protect authors’ privacy." (There's precious little info on the AdVon Commerce website. I'm wondering whether the people shown on the team page - first names and pics, only; no click through to even a slim little bio - are real. But on their linked in page, they lead with the company providing ML (Machine Learning)/AI solutions for eCommerce. Hmmmm.)
It's easy to see that things on the AI-as-writer front are going to get a lot worse, at least for human writers who love to write, and readers who love to read material written by real writers.
I don't think we're there yet, but will we know when it happens? Will we perceive a difference between human-written and AI-generated content? Will anybody care?
Hard to believe that AI - at least, here's hoping, in my lifetime - will be able to write poetry like Seamus Heaney or short stories like Alice Munro. But easy to believe that AI can generate a script for a Hallmark holiday movie, if it's not doing it already.
There's ghost-written, and then there's ghost-written.
Shame on Sports Illustrated- or whoever owns or publishes or outsources or whatevers for them - that they would resort to this approach.
I was going to leave the last word to Chad Finn, an actual human Boston Globe sportswriter, who wrote the article cited here:
...it’s so sad to see the life wrung out of it by parasitic owners who value Sports Illustrated’s name as a brand while disregarding why it once meant so much to so many.
And then I saw this in Globe:
Much of the staff of Sports Illustrated, and possibly all remaining writers and editors, received layoff notices Friday, which essentially could spell the end of a publication that for decades was the gold standard of sports journalism.
R.I.P, S.I....
1 comment:
Intriguing, but transparency key! AI writing for SI - exciting potential, but reader trust deserves clear guidelines. Hope they learn from this. (39 words from the Bard)
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Where will it end and when will we know?
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