Top news app in US has Chinese origins and ‘writes fiction’ with the
help of AI
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[June 05, 2024]
By James Pearson
LONDON (Reuters) - Last Christmas Eve, NewsBreak, a free app with roots
in China that is the most downloaded news app in the United States,
published an alarming piece about a small town shooting. It was
headlined "Christmas Day Tragedy Strikes Bridgeton, New Jersey Amid
Rising Gun Violence in Small Towns."
The problem was, no such shooting took place. The Bridgeton, New Jersey
police department posted a statement on Facebook on December 27
dismissing the article - produced using AI technology - as "entirely
false".
"Nothing even similar to this story occurred on or around Christmas, or
even in recent memory for the area they described," the post said. "It
seems this 'news' outlet's AI writes fiction they have no problem
publishing to readers."
NewsBreak, which is headquartered in Mountain View, California and has
offices in Beijing and Shanghai, told Reuters it removed the article on
December 28, four days after publication.
The company said "the inaccurate information originated from the content
source," and provided a link to the website, adding: "When NewsBreak
identifies any inaccurate content or any violation of our community
standards, we take prompt action to remove that content."
The operators of the website, findplace.xyz, did not respond to a
request from Reuters for comment. The police declined to provide further
comment.
As local news outlets across America have shuttered in recent years,
NewsBreak has filled the void.
Billing itself as "the go-to source for all things local," Newsbreak
says it has over 50 million monthly users. It publishes licensed content
from major media outlets, including Reuters, Fox, AP and CNN as well as
some information obtained by scraping the internet for local news or
press releases which it rewrites with the help of AI. It is only
available in the U.S.
But in at least 40 instances since 2021, the app's use of AI tools
affected the communities it strives to serve, with Newsbreak publishing
erroneous stories; creating 10 stories from local news sites under
fictitious bylines; and lifting content from its competitors, according
to a Reuters review of previously unreported court documents related to
copyright infringement, cease-and-desist emails and a 2022 company memo
registering concerns about "AI-generated stories."
Reuters spoke to seven former NewsBreak employees, including five who
said most of the engineering work behind the app's algorithm is carried
out in its China-based offices. The former employees requested
anonymity, citing confidentiality agreements with NewsBreak.
Two local community programmes assisting disadvantaged people told
Reuters they were impacted by erroneous stories produced by NewsBreak's
AI.
On three occasions in January, February and March, Food to Power, a
Colorado-based food bank said it had to turn people away because
NewsBreak stated incorrect times of food distributions. The charity
complained to NewsBreak in a January 30 email to NewsBreak's general
customer support email address, which Reuters has reviewed. The charity
said it received no response.
Harvest912, a charity in Erie, Pennsylvania emailed NewsBreak about two
inaccurate, AI-based news stories which said it was holding a 24-hour
foot-care clinic for homeless people, asking the outlet to "cease and
desist" erroneous coverage.
"You are doing HARM by publishing this misinformation - homeless people
will walk to these venues to attend a clinic that is not happening,"
Harvest912 told NewsBreak, in a January 12 email seen by Reuters.
In response to Reuters' questions, NewsBreak said it removed all five
articles about the charities after learning they were erroneous and that
the articles were based on incorrect information on some of the
charities' web pages.
Without providing a reason to Reuters, NewsBreak added a disclaimer to
its homepage in early March, warning that its content "may not always be
error-free".
Newsbreak generates revenue by showing ads to its users, who are
predominantly female, above the age of 45, without college degrees, and
live in suburban or rural parts of the U.S., according to the seven
former employees and a 2021 company presentation reviewed by Reuters.
The company launched in the U.S. in 2015 as a subsidiary of Yidian, a
Chinese news aggregation app. Both companies were founded by Jeff Zheng,
the CEO of Newsbreak, and the companies share a U.S. patent registered
in 2015 for an "Interest Engine" algorithm, which recommends news
content based on a user's interests and location.
NewsBreak told Reuters that the patent was assigned by Zheng to both
companies because "some of the concepts were developed from Jeff's time
at Yidian" and that NewsBreak is "U.S.-based" and "U.S.-invested". The
shared patent has "absolutely no bearing on the company and its
operations", NewsBreak said in written responses to Reuters, describing
the technology referenced in the patent as "outdated".
COMPANY MEMO
A May 2022 company memo from a NewsBreak consultant to Zheng, reviewed
by Reuters, raised concerns about NewsBreak's use of AI tools to
re-publish stories from local news sites under five fictitious bylines.
"I cannot think of a faster way to destroy the NewsBreak brand," Norm
Pearlstine, former Executive Editor at the Wall Street Journal and the
Los Angeles Times who was working at the time as a consultant to
NewsBreak, wrote in the memo to Zheng.
In an interview after NewsBreak gave him permission to speak with
Reuters, Pearlstine said he learned of the practice from a NewsBreak
colleague.
"I question the legality of creating fake accounts using content
publishers put behind their paywalls. If I had learned about the
practice while at the LA Times, I would have instructed our lawyer to
seek a restraining order and sue for damages," wrote Pearlstine, whose
six-month consulting role at NewsBreak in 2022 consisted of advising the
company about U.S. editorial businesses.
Pearlstine, who confirmed the memo was authentic, attributed the lapse
to a lack of journalistic experience. "A fair number of people on the
staff were either new to journalism or new to the U.S. market. That was
part of the reason I felt I had to be very direct and very explicit in
explaining why I thought this was important," he told Reuters.
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Newsbreak company is seen at a corporate office building in Mountain
View, California, U.S., April 26, 2024. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
NewsBreak said the news stories referenced in Pearlstine's memo were
a "limited experiment in three U.S. counties" to aggregate
third-party content, and that the effort was disbanded after
producing ten articles. The company denied going behind paywalls and
said it used "snippets" of articles that were publicly visible to
produce complete news stories using OpenAI.
NewsBreak also pointed Reuters towards Zheng's emailed response to
Pearlstine, saying he recognized the problem and asked his team to
fix it.
OpenAI told Reuters its policies prohibited using its technology to
mislead people.
In 2022, Patch Media, which operates digital local news feeds in
every U.S. state, reached a $1.75 million settlement in a lawsuit
against NewsBreak for copyright infringement, according to court
documents reviewed by Reuters, which alleged that NewsBreak
republished Patch's news stories without permission or credit.
Patch did not respond to a request for comment. NewsBreak said the
settlement was not an admission of wrongdoing.
Emmerich Newspapers, which operates newspapers in Mississippi,
Arkansas and Louisiana, reached a 2021 settlement with NewsBreak in
a lawsuit alleging copyright infringement related to NewsBreak's use
of Emmerich's content without permission. NewsBreak said the
settlement was "amicable."
Another copyright lawsuit is ongoing. The two parties are "embroiled
in additional lawsuits which we are vigorously defending against,"
NewsBreak said.
Wyatt Emmerich, the company's president, said the lawsuit against
NewsBreak involved "verbatim copying of content". He added: "What
worries me in the future is that news aggregators could use
artificial intelligence to slightly rewrite our stories which would
make proving copyright infringement much more difficult. I have
witnessed instances of this happening already on news aggregation
sites."
CHINA ROOTS
NewsBreak is a privately held start-up, whose primary backers are
private equity firms San Francisco-based Francisco Partners, and
Beijing-based IDG Capital, NewsBreak told Reuters.
Francisco Partners declined to answer questions about its investment
in NewsBreak. IDG did not respond to repeated emailed requests for
comment.
In February, IDG Capital was added to a list of dozens of Chinese
companies the Pentagon said were allegedly working with Beijing's
military. IDG Capital told Bloomberg in February that it has no
association with the Chinese military and does not belong on that
list. NewsBreak did not comment on the finding.
Yidian, the Chinese aggregation company, divested from NewsBreak in
2019 because "its management team at the time did not understand the
U.S. market", Zheng said. Until then, Li Ya, the president of
Phoenix New Media, a Chinese state-linked media firm which held a
46.9% stake in Yidian, had been a director at NewsBreak, according
to corporate records.
Yidian continued to describe NewsBreak as its U.S. version on its
website until 2021, according to The Wire China.
Yidian in 2017 received praise from ruling Communist Party officials
for its efficiency in disseminating government propaganda. Reuters
found no evidence that NewsBreak censored or produced news that was
favorable to the Chinese government.
A NewsBreak spokesperson said there was no ongoing commercial
relationship with Yidian. Yidian, Phoenix New Media and Li Ya did
not respond to requests from Reuters for comment.
About half of NewsBreak's 200 employees are China-based where they
are engaged in R&D, the company said.
A 2022 company roster reviewed by Reuters showed that 100 of
NewsBreak's 137 engineers at the time were based in China.
Five of the former NewsBreak employees said CEO Zheng divides his
time between China and the United States.
Zheng, who was born in China, is a permanent resident of the United
States and his family relocated to the U.S. early last year, the
company said.
Reuters found five job advertisements NewsBreak posted on Chinese
job sites seeking data analysts or engineers for its Beijing and
Shanghai-based offices capable of "in-depth mining" of "massive user
behaviour data" from the app's U.S. users.
A Republican aide to the U.S. House of Representatives Foreign
Affairs Committee told Reuters the use of Chinese-based engineers by
Newsbreak raised possible concerns that American user data can be
accessed in China. The aide declined to be identified because they
were not authorised to speak to the media.
In a recent high-profile case, U.S. officials warned that TikTok,
whose parent company is the Chinese firm ByteDance, could be
compelled by the Chinese government to use its algorithm to control
what kind of news is viewed by Americans and hand over their data.
TikTok, the most downloaded short video app globally, with 170
million U.S. users, now faces a forced sale or a U.S. ban.
In response to Reuters questions, TikTok said it was planning to
offer third parties more access to examine its code and verify the
app functions as intended.
Zheng told Reuters that NewsBreak complies with U.S. data and
privacy laws and is maintained on U.S.-based Amazon (AWS) servers.
"Staff in China only access anonymous data stored on AWS servers in
the U.S.," he said. Amazon declined to comment.
NewsBreak also said that as a U.S.-based business it was not
subjected to Chinese data laws.
Pearlstine, the former NewsBreak consultant, said NewsBreak's
ability to demonstrate it is a U.S. company was critical.
"The long term health of NewsBreak was dependent on its being
perceived as a California company and that the more the leadership
was in Mountain View, the better it would be for the company," he
said.
(Reporting by James Pearson in London; Additional reporting by
Eduardo Baptista in Beijing; Christopher Bing and Mike Scarcella in
Washington and Karen Freifeld in New York; Editing by Chris Sanders
and Suzanne Goldenberg)
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