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  • A charter on the use of artificial intelligence was created in Paris. Ten commandments for journalists

    The Paris Charter aims to safeguard the right to information by establishing guidelines for the ethical use and development of AI systems within news and information media outlets. It is the product of three months of intense collaboration between AI and journalism specialists, media representatives, and journalism support organizations. The committee, comprised of 32 distinguished personalities, was chaired by Nobel laureate Maria Ressa, with RSF coordinating the collaborative process.

    We, as rep­re­sen­ta­tives of the media and jour­nal­ism com­mu­ni­ty, acknowl­edge the trans­for­ma­tive impli­ca­tions of arti­fi­cial intel­li­gence (AI) for human­i­ty. We cham­pi­on glob­al coop­er­a­tion to ensure AI upholds human rights, peace and democ­ra­cy, and aligns with our shared aspi­ra­tions and val­ues. The his­to­ry of news and infor­ma­tion is inter­twined with tech­no­log­i­cal progress. AI, span­ning from basic automa­tion to ana­lyt­i­cal and cre­ative sys­tems, intro­duces a new cat­e­go­ry of tech­nolo­gies with an unpar­al­leled capac­i­ty to inter­sect with human thought, knowl­edge, and cre­ativ­i­ty. It rep­re­sents a con­sid­er­able shift in infor­ma­tion gath­er­ing, truth seek­ing, sto­ry­telling, and the dis­sem­i­na­tion of ideas. As such, it will pro­found­ly alter the tech­ni­cal, eco­nom­ic and social con­di­tions of jour­nal­ism and edi­to­r­i­al prac­tice.

    AI sys­tems have the poten­tial, depend­ing on their design, gov­er­nance and appli­ca­tion, to rev­o­lu­tion­ize the glob­al infor­ma­tion land­scape. How­ev­er, they also present a struc­tur­al chal­lenge to the right to infor­ma­tion. The right to infor­ma­tion flows from the free­dom to seek, receive and access reli­able infor­ma­tion. It is root­ed in the inter­na­tion­al legal frame­work, includ­ing the Uni­ver­sal Dec­la­ra­tion of Human Rights, the Inter­na­tion­al Covenant on Civ­il and Polit­i­cal Rights, and the Inter­na­tion­al Part­ner­ship for Infor­ma­tion and Democ­ra­cy.

    This right under­pins the fun­da­men­tal free­doms of opin­ion and expres­sion. The social role of jour­nal­ism and media out­lets —serv­ing as trust­wor­thy inter­me­di­aries for soci­ety and indi­vid­u­als— is a cor­ner­stone of democ­ra­cy and enhances the right to infor­ma­tion for all. AI sys­tems can great­ly assist media out­lets in ful­fill­ing this role, but only if they are used trans­par­ent­ly, fair­ly and respon­si­bly in an edi­to­r­i­al envi­ron­ment that staunch­ly upholds jour­nal­is­tic ethics. In affirm­ing these prin­ci­ples, we uphold the right to infor­ma­tion, cham­pi­on inde­pen­dent jour­nal­ism, and com­mit to trust­wor­thy news and media out­lets in the era of AI.

    1. JOURNALISM ETHICS GUIDE THE WAY MEDIA OUTLETS AND JOURNALISTS USE TECHNOLOGY

    Media out­lets and jour­nal­ists use tech­nolo­gies that enhance their capac­i­ty to ful­fill their pri­ma­ry mis­sion: ensur­ing everyone’s right to qual­i­ty, trust­wor­thy infor­ma­tion. The pur­suit and achieve­ment of this goal should dri­ve their choic­es regard­ing tech­no­log­i­cal tools. The use and devel­op­ment of AI sys­tems in jour­nal­ism must uphold the core val­ues of jour­nal­is­tic ethics, includ­ing truth­ful­ness and accu­ra­cy, fair­ness, impar­tial­i­ty, inde­pen­dence, non-harm, non-dis­crim­i­na­tion, account­abil­i­ty, respect for pri­va­cy and for the con­fi­den­tial­i­ty of sources.

    2. MEDIA OUTLETS PRIORITIZE HUMAN AGENCY.

    Human deci­sion-mak­ing must remain cen­tral to both longterm strate­gies and dai­ly edi­to­r­i­al choic­es. The use of AI sys­tems should be a delib­er­ate and wellinformed deci­sion made by humans. Edi­to­r­i­al teams must clear­ly define the goals, scope, and usage con­di­tions for each AI sys­tem. They must ensure a cross-sec­tion­al and con­tin­u­ous over­sight of the impacts of deployed AI sys­tems, ensure their strict com­pli­ance with their usage frame­work, and retain the abil­i­ty to deac­ti­vate them at any time.

    3. AI SYSTEMS USED IN JOURNALISM UNDERGO PRIOR, INDEPENDENT EVALUATION

    The AI sys­tems used by the media and jour­nal­ists should under­go an inde­pen­dent, com­pre­hen­sive, and thor­ough eval­u­a­tion involv­ing jour­nal­ism sup­port groups. This eval­u­a­tion must robust­ly demon­strate adher­ence to the core val­ues of jour­nal­is­tic ethics. These sys­tems must respect pri­va­cy, intel­lec­tu­al prop­er­ty and data pro­tec­tion laws. A clear account­abil­i­ty frame­work is estab­lished for any fail­ure to meet these require­ments. Sys­tems that oper­ate pre­dictably and can be sim­ply explained are pre­ferred.

    4. MEDIA OUTLETS ARE ALWAYS ACCOUNTABLE FOR THE CONTENT THEY PUBLISH

    Media out­lets assume edi­to­r­i­al respon­si­bil­i­ty, includ­ing in their use of AI in gath­er­ing, pro­cess­ing, or dis­sem­i­nat­ing infor­ma­tion. They are liable and account­able for every piece of con­tent they pub­lish. Respon­si­bil­i­ties tied to the use of AI sys­tems should be antic­i­pat­ed, out­lined, and assigned to humans to ensure adher­ence to jour­nal­is­tic ethics and edi­to­r­i­al guide­lines.

    5. MEDIA OUTLETS MAINTAIN TRANSPARENCY IN THEIR USE OF AI SYSTEMS

     Any use of AI that has a sig­nif­i­cant impact on the pro­duc­tion or dis­tri­b­u­tion of jour­nal­is­tic con­tent should be clear­ly dis­closed and com­mu­ni­cat­ed to every­one receiv­ing infor­ma­tion along­side the rel­e­vant con­tent. Media out­lets should main­tain a pub­lic record of the AI sys­tems they use and have used, detail­ing their pur­pos­es, scopes, and con­di­tions of use.

    6. MEDIA OUTLETS ENSURE CONTENT ORIGIN AND TRACEABILITY

    Media out­lets should, when­ev­er pos­si­ble, use state-of-theart tools that guar­an­tee the authen­tic­i­ty and prove­nance of pub­lished con­tent, pro­vid­ing reli­able details about its ori­gin and any sub­se­quent changes it may have under­gone. Any con­tent not meet­ing these authen­tic­i­ty stan­dards should be regard­ed as poten­tial­ly mis­lead­ing and should under­go thor­ough ver­i­fi­ca­tion.

    7. JOURNALISM DRAWS A CLEAR LINE BETWEEN AUTHENTIC AND SYNTHETIC CONTENT

    Jour­nal­ists and media out­lets strive to ensure a clear and reli­able dis­tinc­tion between con­tent derived from the phys­i­cal cap­ture of the real world (such as pho­tographs, and audio and video record­ings) and that which is cre­at­ed or sig­nif­i­cant­ly altered using AI sys­tems. They should favor the use of authen­tic footage and record­ings to depict actu­al events. Media out­lets must avoid mis­lead­ing the pub­lic in their use of AI tech­nolo­gies. In par­tic­u­lar, they should refrain from cre­at­ing or using AI-gen­er­at­ed con­tent mim­ic­k­ing real-world cap­tures and record­ings or real­is­ti­cal­ly imper­son­at­ing actu­al indi­vid­u­als.

    8. AI-DRIVEN CONTENT PERSONALIZATION AND RECOMMENDATION UPHOLDS DIVERSITY AND THE INTEGRITY OF INFORMATION

    In media out­lets, the design and use of AI sys­tems for auto­mat­ic con­tent per­son­al­iza­tion and rec­om­men­da­tion should be guid­ed by jour­nal­is­tic ethics. Such sys­tems should respect infor­ma­tion integri­ty and pro­mote a shared under­stand­ing of rel­e­vant facts and view­points. They should high­light diverse and nuanced per­spec­tives on var­i­ous top­ics, fos­ter­ing open-mind­ed­ness and demo­c­ra­t­ic dia­logue. The use of such sys­tems must be trans­par­ent, and users should when­ev­er pos­si­ble be giv­en the option to dis­able them to ensure unfil­tered access to edi­to­r­i­al con­tent.

    9. JOURNALISTS, MEDIA OUTLETS AND JOURNALISM SUPPORT GROUPS ENGAGE IN THE GOVERNANCE OF AI

    As essen­tial guardians of the right to infor­ma­tion, jour­nal­ists, media out­lets and jour­nal­ism sup­port groups should play an active role in the gov­er­nance of AI sys­tems. They should be includ­ed in any glob­al or inter­na­tion­al insti­tu­tion­al over­sight of AI gov­er­nance and reg­u­la­tion. They should ensure that AI gov­er­nance respects demo­c­ra­t­ic val­ues, and that diver­si­ty of peo­ple and cul­tures is reflect­ed in the devel­op­ment of AI. They must remain at the fore­front of knowl­edge in the field of AI. They are com­mit­ted to exam­in­ing and report­ing on the impacts of AI with accu­ra­cy, nuance, and a crit­i­cal mind.

    10. JOURNALISM UPHOLDS ITS ETHICAL AND ECONOMIC FOUNDATION IN ENGAGEMENTS WITH AI ORGANIZATIONS

    Access to jour­nal­is­tic con­tent by AI sys­tems should be gov­erned by for­mal agree­ments that ensure the sus­tain­abil­i­ty of jour­nal­ism and uphold the long-term shared inter­ests of the media and jour­nal­ists. AI sys­tem own­ers must cred­it sources, respect intel­lec­tu­al prop­er­ty rights, and pro­vide just com­pen­sa­tion to rights holders.This com­pen­sa­tion must be passed on to jour­nal­ists through fair remu­ner­a­tion. AI sys­tem own­ers are also required to main­tain a trans­par­ent and detailed record of the jour­nal­is­tic con­tent uti­lized to train and feed their sys­tems. Rights hold­ers must make the repur­pos­ing of their con­tent by AI sys­tems con­di­tion­al on respect for the integri­ty of the infor­ma­tion and the fun­da­men­tal prin­ci­ples of jour­nal­is­tic ethics. They col­lec­tive­ly call for AI sys­tems to be designed and used in such a way as to guar­an­tee high-qual­i­ty, trust­wor­thy and plu­ral­is­tic infor­ma­tion.

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