Concerns as AI fake news websites rise to 713 in February

AI fake news. Photo credit:palowise.ai

The number of websites using AI-generated content to spread fake news has increased to 713 as of February 22, latest data from NewsGuard, a platform that provides transparent tools to counter misinformation, has revealed.


Disclosed in its ‘Tracking AI-enabled Misinformation’ report, NewsGuard said most of the websites have little to no human oversight and publish only AI-generated news.

Expressing concerns on the spread of fake news, the report disclosed that the publications are found in 15 languages including Arabic, Chinese, Czech, Dutch, English, French, German, Indonesian, Italian, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish, Tagalog, Thai, and Turkish.

Before now, NewsGuard noted a rise in AI-generated sites making false or unverified claims from just under 50 in May to around 600 in December 2023, a more than tenfold increase across just over half a year.


While noting that the rollout of generative artificial intelligence tools has been a boom to content farms and misinformation purveyors alike, NewsGuard in the report said: “To date, NewsGuard’s team has identified 713 Unreliable AI-generated news and information websites, labeled “UAINS,” spanning 15 languages: Arabic, Chinese, Czech, Dutch, English, French, German, Indonesian, Italian, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish, Tagalog, Thai, and Turkish.

“These websites typically have generic names, such as iBusiness Day, Ireland Top News, and Daily Time Update, which to a consumer appear to be established news sites.

This obscures that the sites operate with little to no human oversight and publish articles written largely or entirely by bots — rather than presenting traditionally created and edited journalism, with human oversight.

“The sites have churned out dozens and in some cases hundreds of generic articles, about a range of subjects including politics, technology, entertainment, and travel.
The articles have sometimes included false claims, including about political leaders (see example below relating to the Israeli Prime Minister).


“Other false claims relate to celebrity death hoaxes, fabricated events, and articles presenting old events as if they just occurred.”

On what is driving traffic towards it, NewsGuard said in many cases, the revenue model for the websites is programmatic advertising under which the ad-tech industry delivers ads without regard to the nature or quality of the website. It added that top brands are unintentionally supporting these sites as a result.

It warned that unless brands take steps to exclude untrustworthy sites, their ads would continue to appear on these types of sites, creating an economic incentive for their creation at scale.

In addition to the sites included in the Tracker, NewsGuard said it also identified a Chinese-government run website using AI-generated text as authority for the false claim that the U.S. operates a bio-weapons lab in Kazakhstan infecting camels to endanger people in China.

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