The expansion of generative artificial intelligence has transformed the way information is produced and circulated, raising pressing questions about its impact on truthfulness, authorship, and informational responsibility. In this new landscape, disinformation is taking on increasingly sophisticated and harder-to-detect forms, making its study an urgent task in understanding the balance between technology, power, and public knowledge. In this context, the Newsnet #5 seminar took place at the University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU) on December 13, 2024 and sought to find answers to understand the impact that the incorporation of artificial intelligence will have in the media, particularly in aspects such as misinformation or the impact on journalists and their audiences. This volume is structured in two main sections that are in dialogue with one another. The first examines how artificial intelligence is becoming embedded at the core of communication and journalism, reshaping the ways in which information is produced, distributed and received. The second section broadens the focus to other forms of digital communication. It brings together research that investigates how social media and new expressive formats are redefining the relationships between media and their audiences. These contributions allow for the situating of artificial intelligence within a wider ecosystem, where technology, culture and everyday life intersect.
AI to empower media and democracy in the global south: A critical reflection
págs. 9-19
Transparency when using a rtificial intelligence: a copyright law approach
págs. 20-28
AI, media , and journalism: Editorial and algorithmic decisions in public service media (PSM)
Ainara Larrondo Ureta, Simón Peña Fernández, Mikel Leibar Ruiz de Gauna
págs. 29-34
Artificial intelligence applied to informative speech: An exploratory study with journalism students
Terese Mendiguren Galdospin, Koldobika Meso Ayerdi, María Reyes Prados Rodríguez, Urko Peña Alonso
págs. 35-42
Artificial intelligence , journalistic production, and media consumption: The design of a methodological tool for the analysis of related media coverage in Spain
Javier Odriozola-Chené, Rosa Pérez Arozamena, Javier Díaz Noci
págs. 43-54
Disinformation and gender bias in artificial intelligence: analysis, impact , and proposals for technological equity
págs. 55-62
Coming of age: Drivers and consequences of artificial intelligence on the news publishing economy
págs. 62-73
Citizen perception of artificial intelligence: impact and applications in journalism
págs. 74-79
Basque feminism on social media
Maider Eizmendi Iraola, Ainara Larrondo Ureta, Ainhoa Novo Arbona, Julen Orbegozo Terradillos, Simón Peña Fernández
págs. 81-86
Media desensitization in coverage of mass and school shootings: state of the art and future research proposal
págs. 87-96
Breast cancer on tiktok: emotional support ,misinformation , and the challenge of reliable health communication
Jesús Pérez Dasilva, María Ganzabal Learreta, Urko Peña Alonso
págs. 97-103
Critical media literacy and migration in higher education: a critical dialogic approach
págs. 104-109
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