Renowned tech publications Wired and Business Insider were caught publishing AI-generated articles under the fake byline “Margaux Blanchard,” exposing how sophisticated AI content is infiltrating mainstream journalism. The incident highlights a growing crisis where AI-generated “slop” is eroding trust in online media, with human editors at reputable outlets falling victim to increasingly convincing automated content.
What happened: Multiple publications discovered they had been duped by AI-generated articles submitted under a fictitious journalist’s name.
- Wired published “They Fell in Love Playing Minecraft. Then the Game Became Their Wedding Venue,” which referenced a non-existent 34-year-old ordained officiant in Chicago.
- Business Insider ran two personal essays, including one about remote work and parenting that contained generic, AI-typical language patterns.
- Other affected outlets included Index on Censorship, Cone Magazine, and SFGate, which still has a Disney superfandom article live that mentions a fake TikTok creator named “Kayla Reed.”
The telltale signs: Editors and fact-checkers identified several red flags that revealed the AI-generated nature of the content.
- Jacob Furedi from Dispatch, a news publication, received a pitch about a Colorado town serving as “the world’s most secretive training grounds for death investigation” that couldn’t be independently verified.
- Articles contained familiar sentence structures typical of AI writing and referenced people who don’t actually exist.
- One piece included the generically AI-sounding conclusion: “There is no perfect time to become a parent. There is only the time that life gives you and what you choose to do with it.”
Why this matters: The incident represents a significant threat to journalism’s credibility as AI-generated content becomes increasingly sophisticated.
- University of Kansas research shows that reader trust and credibility in news sources drops when AI involvement is known.
- Separate research by Trusting News, an independent organization focused on media credibility, found that AI disclosures by newsrooms can also hurt trust.
- Publications like Wired, which regularly covers AI’s negative impact on content quality, found themselves victims of the very phenomenon they report on.
The financial stakes: The scam potentially involved substantial sums, as publications like Wired sometimes pay thousands of dollars for in-depth reporting.
Industry response: Affected publications acted swiftly to remove the fraudulent content and issued editor’s notes explaining their decisions.
- Business Insider’s note stated the essay “didn’t meet Business Insider’s standards.”
- Wired explained their article “does not meet our editorial standards.”
- Even aggregated content was pulled, with Mashable removing their coverage that had praised Wired’s piece as a “charming feature.”
What editors are saying: Industry professionals report being overwhelmed by AI-generated pitches.
- “I’m already being inundated by pitches which are clearly written by ChatGPT,” Furedi told Press Gazette, calling it a “terrible” trend that’s “symptomatic of the direction that certain types of journalism are going in.”
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