Paul Samyn Editor’s Note
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AI’s promise and peril

A funny thing happened on the way to delivering an audio version of the Free Press.

Several months ago, we engaged with a company called Instaread on an initiative to allow readers to listen to the journalism our newsroom produces. With just a click of a mouse or swipe on your smartphone, a calm and collected voice would read our news stories to you, so you could relax or do another task while taking in the day’s news.

The initial feedback was more than positive. Visually impaired readers told me how important it was to hear the stories they wanted to access. Our site metrics showed many readers were tapping into the voice-version of our stories, a trend that continued to grow. Based on that early experience, we began considering what else we could do with audio news.

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All that came to a screeching halt, though, when we realized the computer-generated news reader was making mistakes.

Suddenly, the reading app was misreading Premier Wab Kinew. For reasons that my intelligence can’t explain, the artificial intelligence behind the transcription reader began saying “Premier Pallister” or “Premier Whitecloud” when our copy referenced Canada’s first First Nations provincial premier.

As we listened more, we found other problems, too. In short order, we had heard more than enough — so last week we temporarily hit pause on the audio version of the Free Press until we can work with the company to determine what was going wrong and how to prevent it from ever occurring again.

I don’t know if this is an example of an AI “hallucination,” where large-language models suddenly start spewing forth misleading information posing as facts. But I do know that we spent weeks before this feature was launched in extensive testing, down to ensuring its chatbot could read “Wab Kinew” correctly (along with Métis and Wiebe and Portage and Hellebuyck and many other words important to Winnipeggers).

If there is a cautionary tale here, it’s the need to be wary of the siren song of AI. Leveraging machine-learning to read the news to Free Press subscribers seemed like a safe bet. Until it wasn’t.

We recognize how important trust, credibility and accuracy are to our brand, which is why we instantly shut down Instaread – and also why I am disclosing what happened to you.

But what about brands that don’t care as much about those values?

If you ask one of the new AI chatbots to tell you what a famous person did or said, or about a local court case or what was in yesterday’s provincial budget, can you rely on it?

The Free Press is keeping an eye on the potential of artificial intelligence — but you can trust us to have your back and apply human intelligence when it comes to the perils of this new technology.

 

Paul Samyn, Editor

 

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COMING UP

A growing number of newcomers are turning to video blogs to document their lives in Canada. Topics range from the breezy — such as a video tour of their apartment — to the critical, such as the challenges international students face in their new home. Tahira Khan has their story in Saturday’s 49.8 section.


Eighteen years after the last Hollywood movie was released on VHS tape, there’s been a renaissance of sort for the much-maligned format.

Feature writer David Sanderson visits Big D’s Video Rental, a Winnipeg enterprise wholly dedicated to VHS cassettes.

Check out this blast from the past: a car-shaped device that does nothing but rewind VHS tapes. Dave Sanderson brings us back in time later this week with a visit to Big D's Video Rental. (Mike Deal / Free Press)

Check out this blast from the past: a car-shaped device that does nothing but rewind VHS tapes. Dave Sanderson brings us back in time later this week with a visit to Big D’s Video Rental. (Mike Deal / Free Press)

Country superstar Chris Stapleton headlines a three-act concert at the arena tonight; the bushy-bearded singer has risen to the top of the country mountain on the strength of his cliché-free songs. Alan Small reviews the show in Thursday’s paper.


Next week, Prairie Theatre Exchange presents Joan Didion’s The Year of Magical Thinking, an adaptation of the American writer’s memoir about grief; in Monday’s arts section, Deborah Schnitzer’s Lived Lives column examines how she relates to Didion’s means of dealing with the death of her husband.


In sports, the Winnipeg Jets look to close out a five-game stretch at home Thursday with a victory over the Calgary Flames. Game time is 7 p.m.

The NHL club then hits the road for the final time during the regular season, with stops in Minnesota on Saturday afternoon and games in Nashville, Dallas and Colorado next week. Free Press hockey writer Ken Wiebe will be on the trip as the Jets push to finish strong in the Central Division prior to the playoffs.


Here at home, the Winnipeg Ice, champions of the Manitoba Female U18 Hockey League, host the Regina Rebels in the Esso Cup West Regional best-of-three series this weekend, with a spot in the U18 national tournament later this month in Vernon, B.C., on the line.

The Ice and Rebels collide in games 1 and 2 on Friday and Saturday, at 7:30 p.m., respectively, while a Game 3 (if necessary) would go Sunday at 2:15 p.m. All games are at the Hockey For All Centre.

ONE GREAT PHOTO

Children play in a ball pit during the 'Easter Eggstravaganza' at Assiniboia Downs on Sunday. Other activities on offer included a scavenger hunt and pictures with Mr. and Mrs. Rabbit. (John Woods / Free Press)

Children play in a ball pit during the ‘Easter Eggstravaganza’ at Assiniboia Downs on Sunday. Other activities on offer included a scavenger hunt and pictures with Mr. and Mrs. Rabbit. (John Woods / Free Press)

 
 

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WELL-READ STORIES THIS WEEK

Chris Kitching and Carol Sanders:

‘High-risk, high-reward budget’

Province tackles health care woes while battling massive deficit Read More

 

Chris Kitching:

Aggravation on menu for restaurateurs across city as pint-size pirates break in, steal booze

Elena Grande felt a sense of despair after thieves — possibly children — broke into her family’s River Heights restaurant and stole about a dozen bottles of alcohol this week. The theft from Mona Lisa... Read More

 

Chris Kitching:

Speeders pinched on Perimeter cry foul

Police won’t say how many drivers snared in initial photo-radar campaign Read More

 

Mike McIntyre:

Perfetti’s perseverence pays off with huge night against Kings

Forward the difference in slump-busting victory Read More

 
 
 

LEAN BACK: GREAT LONG READS

Julia-Simone Rutgers:

Fossil fuel fouls clean-grid future

Manitoba Hydro can’t escape its emergency reliance on natural gas as demand ramps up for electric power Read More

 

Joshua Frey-Sam:

Adios Max

Slugger chooses Mexico over Goldeyes Read More

 

David Christianson:

To CPP, or not to CPP — that is the question

So, when should I take my CPP? I’m glad you asked. Should people take their Canada Pension Plan benefits as early as 60, wait till the “normal age” of 65 or defer until 70 — or somewhere in between? T... Read More

 

David Sanderson:

Scrap-metal maestro

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OPINIONS: COLUMNS AND ANALYSIS

Dan Lett:

Trudeau is right, but that’s irrelevant; no one believes him

For reasons that are not entirely clear, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is unwilling to admit he has lost the national argument over carbon taxes. In a pre-budget barnstorming tour of the country, Trud... Read More

 

Tom Brodbeck:

Borrowing from our future: NDP budget drives up debt

The most important number in the NDP’s first budget unveiled Tuesday is not how much money the government plans to spend on health care, education and family services. It’s the one that shows how much debt the government is taking on to pay for all of those things. Read More

 

Rebecca Chambers:

How elaborate a wake-up call is necessary?

Unlike If Day, Winnipeg's winter was not a drill Read More

 

Charles Adler:

Kindness, these days, is in short supply

Kindness may be a Christlike virtue and a highly appropriate subject for the King to be offering during the holiest week of the Christian calendar. But kindness is not what any objective observer would call a dominant feature of today’s politics and media. Read More

 
 

ON THE LIGHTER SIDE

Gabrielle Piché:

BDI preps new Main Street location

Original menu on offer, ‘infrastructure in place’ to add hard ice cream Read More

 

Gabrielle Piché:

Taste of culture, heritage

African grocery stores gain foothold as Manitoba community grows Read More

 

Jen Zoratti:

Podcast made from what’s real

Friends focus on what makes Winnipeg Winnipeg Read More

 
 

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