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From historical fiction to graphic novels, readers of the Fast Forward newsletter have dozens of recommendations for books suitable for children and young adults.
Defendants admit that the book "does address gender identity." In preparation for the buddy class, the teacher first read the book to P.D. and S.E.'s fifth grade class.
Lessons (and an apology) from the Sun-Times CEO on that AI-generated book list The summer section was intended to be a supplemental value to our subscribers alongside our own journalism.
Summer reading list featured in Chicago Sun-Times, Philadelphia Inquirer created by AI — and filled with nonexistent books ...
The Chicago Sun-Times and Philadelphia Inquirer ran a fake, AI-generated summer reading list in print. Here's why it harms authors and readers alike.
The Chicago Sun-Times had to issue a humiliating mea culpa on Tuesday after a summer reading list was revealed to contain mostly AI-generated book titles -- and it was apparently not the only AI ...
A summer reading insert recommended made-up titles by real authors such as Isabel Allende and Delia Owens. The Sun-Times and The Philadelphia Inquirer have apologized.
The content is a syndicated insert not produced by newspaper staff, but readers could not tell the difference at first glance. The creator behind the list admits he used AI to put it together.
On Sunday, the Chicago Sun-Times published an advertorial summer reading list containing at least 10 fake books attributed to real authors, according to multiple reports on social media.
Chicago, Philadelphia Newspapers Publish Reading List With Fake, AI-Generated Books The content is a syndicated insert not produced by newspaper staff, but readers could not tell the difference at ...
The Chicago Sun-Times newspaper published a “Summer Reading List” on Sunday that probably raised quite a few eyebrows in Chicagoland over the weekend. That’s because many of the books on the ...
According to an online creator, the Chicago Sun-Times published a summer reading list full of books that didn't actually exist. If true, it strongly suggests the newspaper used AI to generate the ...