Venezuela's newest news agency says AI anchors protect reporters amid government crackdown
The Hindu
News anchor El Pana, and his colleague “La Chama,” or “The Girl,” are generated using artificial intelligence.
One of Venezuela's newest news anchors sits on a stool, dressed in a flannel shirt and chinos as he delivers the day's headlines.
He goes by "El Pana," Venezuelan slang for "friend."
Only, he's not real.
El Pana, and his colleague "La Chama," or "The Girl," are generated using artificial intelligence, though they look, sound and move realistically.
They were created as part of an initiative dubbed "Operation Retweet" by Colombia-based organisation Connectas, led by director Carlos Huertas, to publish news from a dozen independent media outlets in Venezuela and in the process protect reporters as the government has launched a crackdown on journalists and protesters.
"We decided to use artificial intelligence to be the 'face' of the information we're publishing," Huertas said in an interview, "because our colleagues who are still out doing their jobs are facing much more risk."
At least 10 journalists have been arrested since mid-June and eight remain imprisoned on charges including terrorism, according to Reporters Without Borders.