A national network of local news sites called Hoodline is using fake authors with fictional and pointedly racially diverse names to byline AI-generated articles. The outlet’s publisher claims it’s doing so in an extremely normal, human-mitigated way. But unsurprisingly, a Nieman Lab analysis of the content and its authors suggests otherwise. Per Neiman, Hoodline websites were once a refuge for hyperlocal human-boots-on-the-ground reporting. These days, though, when you log onto a Hoodline site, you’ll find articles written by a slew of entirely fabricated writers. Hoodline is owned by a company called Impress3, which in turn is helmed by a CEO named Zack Chen. In April, Chen published an article on Hoodline’s San Francisco site explaining that the news network was using “pen names” to publish AI-generated content — a euphemism that others have deployed when caught publishing fake writers in reputable outlets. In that hard-to-parse post, Chen declared that these pen names “are not associated with any individual live journalist or editor.” Instead, “the independent variants of the AI model that we’re using are tied to specific pen names, but are still being edited by humans.” (We must note: that’s not the definition of a pen name, but whatever.) Unlike the fake authors that Futurism investigations discovered at Sports Illustrated, The Miami Herald, The LA Times, and many other publications, Hoodline’s made-up authors do have little “AI” badges next to their names. But in a way, as Nieman notes, that disclosure makes its writers even stranger — not to mention more…News Site Says It’s Using to AI to Crank Out Articles Bylined by Fake Racially Diverse Writers in a Very Responsible Way