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  1. A data-centric approach for ethical and trustworthy AI in journalism.Laurence Dierickx, Andreas Lothe Opdahl, Sohail Ahmed Khan, Carl-Gustav Lindén & Diana Carolina Guerrero Rojas - 2024 - Ethics and Information Technology 26 (4):1-13.
    AI-driven journalism refers to various methods and tools for gathering, verifying, producing, and distributing news information. Their potential is to extend human capabilities and create new forms of augmented journalism. Although scholars agreed on the necessity to embed journalistic values in these systems to make AI systems accountable, less attention was paid to data quality, while the results’ accuracy and efficiency depend on high-quality data in any machine learning task. Assessing data quality in the context of AI-driven journalism requires a (...)
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  • Making whole: The ethics of correction.Michael Bugeja - 2007 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 22 (1):49 – 65.
    This qualitative analysis investigates the ethics of correction across media platforms. Using rhetorical and philosophical methods, I identify key components of corrections, associating them with accountability and other ethical precepts. Explications of three case studies follow - 60 Minutes Wednesday: The Bush Memos, Intel: The Infamous Chip Flaw, and Google in China: "Do No Evil" - supporting conclusions about the consequences of accountability (or lack thereof).
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  • Moral Transgressors vs. Moral Entrepreneurs: The Curious Case of Comedy Accountability in an Era of Social Platform Dependence.Sara Ödmark - 2021 - Journal of Media Ethics 36 (4):220-234.
    Comedy can hold political actors accountable, for instance through satire. But what kind of moral negotiation concerns comedians? Utilizing an understanding of accountability as a dynamic of intera...
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  • Journalists' Views About Accountability to Different Societal Groups.Halliki Harro-Loit - 2015 - Journal of Media Ethics 30 (1):31-43.
    This study addresses the question about which groups journalists in 12 European and two Arab countries feel that they are accountable to. In their daily work, journalists do not only face dilemmas about conflicting values, but they also have to make decisions about whose interests they should protect in the first instance. Academic scholarship has developed well argued discourses on pressure groups and conflicting interests, as well as on the various incentives that influence journalists' loyalties. The present study aims to (...)
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