![]() The article has been corrected to clarify that the saver would earn $300 on top of their $10,000 principal amount,” the correction states.Īnother correction suggests the AI tool plagiarized. ![]() “An earlier version of this article suggested a saver would earn $10,300 after a year by depositing $10,000 into a savings account that earns 3% interest compounding annually. One correction, which was added to the end of an article titled “What Is Compound Interest?” states that the story initially gave some wildly inaccurate personal finance advice. The result of the audit, she said, was that CNET identified additional stories that required correction, “with a small number requiring substantial correction.” CNET also identified several other stories with “minor issues such as incomplete company names, transposed numbers, or language that our senior editors viewed as vague.” “After one of the AI-assisted stories was cited, rightly, for factual errors, the CNET Money editorial team did a full audit.” “Editors generated the outlines for the stories first, then expanded, added to and edited the AI drafts before publishing,” Guglielmo wrote. Some headlines from stories written using the AI tool include, “ Does a Home Equity Loan Affect Private Mortgage Insurance?” and “ How to Close A Bank Account.” She said this amounted to about 1% of the total content published on CNET during the same period, and was done as part of a “test” project for the CNET Money team “to help editors create a set of basic explainers around financial services topics.” ![]() Guglielmo said CNET used an “internally designed AI engine,” not ChatGPT, to help write 77 published stories since November. While using AI to automate news stories is not new – the Associated Press began doing so nearly a decade ago – the issue has gained new attention amid the rise of ChatGPT, a viral new AI chatbot tool that can quickly generate essays, stories and song lyrics in response to user prompts. The disclosure comes after Futurism reported earlier this month that CNET was quietly using AI to write articles and later f ound errors in one of those posts. How Microsoft could use ChatGPT to supercharge its products Creditsīlanco gets both writing and production credit for this song, as does Cashmere Cat and Blake Slatkin. And those who are credited solely in a writing capacity are Snoop and Mike Posner.The OpenAI website ChatGPT on a laptop computer Gabby Jones/Bloomberg/Getty Images This track has been months in the making, and certain teasers were being dropped at least since the beginning of 2022.Īs to be expected of a BTS song, upon release this track hit on certain music hosting social-media platforms. Interesting to note is that this singing Xbox controller is actually named after “Bad Decision”. ![]() It came out via Interscope Records and Blanco’s own label, Friends Keep Secrets.Īlong with the release of this track has come the introduction of the exclusive “first-ever Xbox singing controller”. The song is however, the Doggfather’s first time working with the Bangtan Boys.īenny and Snoop worked together on on Katy Perry’s 2010 track “California Gurls”. He officially remixed a few of their songs earlier in the year under the project title #MyBTSTracks.Ĭontrary to popular belief, “Bad Decisions” doesn’t marks the first time he has teamed up with Snoop Dogg. As such, Benny has previously collaborated with BTS in a sense. ![]() The rise of BTS has spearheaded the concurrent globalization of K-pop, in which it is becoming increasingly more common for South Korean artists to collaborate with musicians from the West. BTS, the mega-successful boy band from South Korea.Snoop Dogg, the legendary Los Angeles-based rapper.Benny Blanco, a prominent behind-the-scene’ musician from Virginia. ![]()
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