this post was submitted on 28 Oct 2024
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Earlier this year, WIRED asked AI detection startup Pangram Labs to analyze Medium. It took a sampling of 274,466 recent posts over a six week period and estimated that over 47 percent were likely AI-generated. “This is a couple orders of magnitude more than what I see on the rest of the internet,” says Pangram CEO Max Spero. (The company’s analysis of one day of global news sites this summer found 7 percent as likely AI-generated.)

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[–] GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org 39 points 1 week ago (3 children)

It was an SEO hellhole from the start, so this isn't surprising.

Do Forbes next!

[–] Firipu@startrek.website 7 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Is there a single good article on Forbes? It's always fucking clickbait without actual content.

[–] GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org 13 points 1 week ago (1 children)

After all these years, I'm still a little confused about what Forbes is. It used to be a legitimate, even respected magazine. Now it's a blog site full of self-important randos who escaped from their cages on LinkedIn.

There's some sort of approval process, but it seems like its primary purpose is to inflate egos.

[–] alyaza@beehaw.org 8 points 1 week ago

As of 2019 the company published 100 articles each day produced by 3,000 outside contributors who were paid little or nothing.[52] This business model, in place since 2010,[53] "changed their reputation from being a respectable business publication to a content farm", according to Damon Kiesow, the Knight Chair in digital editing and producing at the University of Missouri School of Journalism.[52] Similarly, Harvard University's Nieman Lab deemed Forbes "a platform for scams, grift, and bad journalism" as of 2022.[49]

they realized that they could just become an SEO farm/content mill and churn out absurd numbers of articles while paying people table scraps or nothing at all, and they've never changed

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