LA Times owner plans to add AI-powered 'bias meter' on news stories, sparking newsroom backlash

ByLiam Reilly and Jon Passantino CNNWire logo
Friday, December 6, 2024 8:00PM
LA Times owner plans to add AI-powered 'bias meter' on news stories
The Los Angeles Times owner says he will implement an artificial intelligence-powered "bias meter" on the paper's news articles.

LOS ANGELES -- Los Angeles Times owner Patrick Soon-Shiong, who blocked the newspaper's endorsement of Kamala Harris and plans to overhaul its editorial board, says he will implement an artificial intelligence-powered "bias meter" on the paper's news articles to provide readers with "both sides" of a story.

Soon-Shiong, the biotech billionaire who acquired the Times in 2018, told CNN political commentator Scott Jennings - who will join the Times' editorial board - that he's been "quietly building" an AI meter "behind the scenes." The meter, slated to be released in January, is powered by the same augmented intelligence technology that he's been building since 2010 for health care purposes, Soon-Shiong said.

"Somebody could understand as they read it that the source of the article has some level of bias," he said on Jennings' "Flyover Country," podcast. "And what we need to do is not have what we call confirmation bias and then that story automatically, the reader can press a button and get both sides of that exact same story based on that story and then give comments."

Soon-Shiong said major publishers have so far failed to adequately separate news and opinion, which he suggested "could be the downfall of what now people call mainstream media."

The comments prompted a rebuke from the union representing hundreds of the Times' newsroom staffers, which said Soon-Shiong had "publicly suggested his staff harbors bias, without offering evidence or examples."

"Our members - and all Times staffers - abide by a strict set of ethics guidelines, which call for fairness, precision, transparency, vigilance against bias, and an earnest search to understand all sides of an issue," the Los Angeles Times Guild said in a statement Thursday. "Those longstanding principles will continue guiding our work."

The contentious moves from the paper's owner also led to the resignation of Harry Litman, a senior legal affairs columnist for the Times' Opinion page.

"My resignation is a protest and visceral reaction against the conduct of the paper's owner, Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong. Soon-Shiong has made several moves to force the paper, over the forceful objections of his staff, into a posture more sympathetic to Donald Trump," Litman wrote Thursday. "Given the existential stakes for our democracy that I believe Trump's second term poses, and the evidence that Soon-Shiong is currying favor with the President-elect, they are repugnant and dangerous."

Litman's resignation comes days after Kerry Cavanaugh, the Times' assistant editorial page editor, also announced her exit, Status first reported. In addition to his sweeping changes to the editorial board, a person familiar with the matter said Soon-Shiong has begun reviewing the headlines of all opinion pieces before publication. A spokesperson for the Times did not respond to CNN's request for comment.

The moves come as Soon-Shiong looks to restructure the newspaper's editorial board, telling CNN last month that he plans to balance the paper's opinion section with more conservative and centrist voices in the wake of President-elect Donald Trump's victory.

"If we were honest with ourselves, our current board of opinion writers veered very left, which is fine, but I think in order to have balance, you also need to have somebody who would trend right, and more importantly, somebody that would trend in the middle," Soon-Shiong told CNN in November.

The restructuring follows Soon-Shiong's divisive decision to block a drafted endorsement of Vice President Harris two weeks before Election Day, which resulted in the resignation of several members of the paper's editorial board, staff protests, and thousands of readers canceling their subscriptions. Just three of the editorial board's eight members now remain, according to the Times website. On Wednesday, Soon-Shiong told Jennings that when the editorial board shared it had "pre-packaged" a presidential endorsement "without having met with any of the candidates," he was "outraged."

"I did not want our paper to be part of that method of providing information or misinformation or disinformation," he said.

"Everybody has a right to an opinion, that's fair," Soon-Shiong said, underscoring that the paper needs to "actually create some level of balance when it comes to opinion and columnist, and then we need to actually let the reader know this is opinion."

In his resignation Thursday, Litman called the owner's decision to spike the presidential endorsement a "deep insult to the paper's readership."

"Trump has made it clear that he will make trouble for media outlets that cross him," Litman wrote. "Rather than reacting with indignation at this challenge to his paper's critical function in a democracy, Soon-Shiong threw the paper to the wolves. That was cowardly."

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