Passez à l'illimité avec Magzter GOLD

Passez à l'illimité avec Magzter GOLD

Obtenez un accès illimité à plus de 9 000 magazines, journaux et articles Premium pour seulement

$149.99
 
$74.99/Année

Essayer OR - Gratuit

You deserve the truth, not AI’s interpretation of it

Manila Bulletin

|

September 25, 2025

We all want to understand the world around us.

- By EBU Director of News LIZ CORBIN, and CEO of WAN-IFRA VINCENT PEYREGNE

Perhaps we want more clarity about the war in Gaza, or what our government is doing about the healthcare our family relies on. It might be something as simple as changes to a bus route that will affect our daily commute. No matter how momentous or mundane the issue, we have a right to news we can trust.

We’ve all been there, scrolling our feed, seeing an astonishing clip, or a shocking must-share story. But now we must constantly question what’s real and what’s the creation of artificial intelligence.

Al-generated output is so convincing today and shaping so much of the information we consume that we risk being unable to trust anything anymore. And mistrust is the fuel that drives conspiracism, social polarization and democratic disengagement.

In reality, the integrity of what we call ‘news’ is being eroded by the tools that are meant to help us make sense of the world.

This World News Day, we want to underline that the public are entitled to the facts that professional journalists and the organizations they work for worldwide are committed to finding, corroborating and sharing.

However, the tech companies building AI systems that millions of people use daily are falling far short of their responsibility to truth.

Original research carried out this year by the BBC found that half of AI-generated answers to news-related requests left out important details and made other key errors.

The Al assistants they tested consistently churned out garbled facts, fabricated or misattributed quotes, decontextualized information or paraphrased reporting with no acknowledgement.

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Manila Bulletin

Manila Bulletin

DBP needs longer dividend relief to recover MIC capital

State-run Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP) will continue to seek regulatory and dividend relief for several more years as it aims to recover the capital it infused into the Maharlika Investment Corp. (MIC).

time to read

1 mins

December 2, 2025

Manila Bulletin

FLI deploys P2 B for 10 new projects

Gotianun-led Filinvest Land Inc. (FLI) reported that it has reinvested ₱1.86 billion raised from the share buyback and exchange for Filinvest REIT Corporation (FILRT) shares executed on December 11, 2024.

time to read

1 min

December 2, 2025

Manila Bulletin

Olivarez captures back-to-back Open titles

Eric Jed Olivarez further solidified his status as one of Philippine tennis' brightest stars after clinching the Mayor Edwin Olivarez National Open Tennis Championship crown for the second straight year, emphatically defeating the same opponent he swept in last year's finals.

time to read

1 min

December 2, 2025

Manila Bulletin

An indelible trademark for nat'l athletes

The design went public June last year on the track suits of Filipino athletes while in training camp in Metz for the Paris Olympics Last October, Filipino athletes at the World Games in Chengdu last August were all clad in a perked up and more colorful tracksuits and podium shirts, and the same uniforms were worn at the Asian Youth Games in Manama in October.

time to read

1 min

December 2, 2025

Manila Bulletin

Manila Bulletin

PH to miss 2025 growth target

Corruption taking heavy toll on economy

time to read

2 mins

December 2, 2025

Manila Bulletin

Angara: 2026 DepEd budget to sustain universal, targeted school feeding

Department of Education (DepEd) Secretary Sonny Angara on Monday, Dec. 1, said the 2026 budget of the DepEd will allow the agency to sustain its combined approach of universal and targeted school feeding, as lawmakers approved a significant increase to strengthen the government's efforts to curb undernutrition and support early learning.

time to read

1 mins

December 2, 2025

Manila Bulletin

Corruption scandal hits investor trust

Japanese financial giant MUFG Bank Ltd. said investors have turned pessimistic following heightened political risks, but the relative strength of the Philippine peso is buoying sentiment.

time to read

1 mins

December 2, 2025

Manila Bulletin

PNP, Informatics ink education pact to boost digital skills of cops

The Philippine National Police (PNP) said Friday, Nov. 28, that it has expanded its push for atechnology-skilled and future-ready force through a newly signed educational partnership with Informatics Philippines and PNP Foundation, Inc. (PNPFI).

time to read

1 mins

December 2, 2025

Manila Bulletin

Borrowing costs drop on S&P nod

The Marcos administration borrowed P25 billion through the sale of short-dated Treasury bills, exceeding its planned amount of P22 billion, as lower borrowing costs and a recent affirmation from debt watcher S&P Global Ratings boosted investor appetite.

time to read

2 mins

December 2, 2025

Manila Bulletin

Pag-IBIG Fund assists 3.2 million members through cash loans in Jan-Oct, up 28%

Pag-IBIG Fund helped 3.2 million Filipino workers meet their immediate financial needs through its short-term loan (STL) programs from January to October 2025, marking a 28% increase in borrowers compared to the same period last year, officials announced on Monday, Dec 1.

time to read

2 mins

December 2, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size