logo
AI-generated news? Fine with us, say almost one in five Irish people

AI-generated news? Fine with us, say almost one in five Irish people

The Journal8 hours ago

HOW WOULD YOU feel if this article was written by ChatGPT?
A major survey of Irish people's news consumption, and Irish attitudes to the media, has found 19% are somewhat or even very comfortable with the idea of news mainly produced by AI, with some human oversight.
That's up by four percentage points in just one year, the annual Reuters Institute Digital News Report for Ireland found.
Under-35s are almost twice as comfortable with the idea of AI-produced news as over-35s.
Five percent of Irish people say they're already getting some of their news from AI chatbots.
(This article was entirely written by a human, by the way.)
The annual research report, published today, finds Irish people remain more engaged with the news – and more trusting of the news media – than audiences in other countries, including the US and the UK.
Irish young people aged 18-24 are now more interested in the news than they have been at any point since the Covid-19 pandemic.
However, this high point still amounts to just 39% of 18-24-year-olds expressing an interest in the news.
Taking a longer term perspective, there is no question that overall engagement in the news is steadily declining in Ireland, as it is internationally. In 2015, over 70% of Irish people were 'extremely' or 'very' interested in the news; now, the equivalent figure is 56%.
The prevalence of news avoidance is also clear. While there was a 3 point drop year-on-year in the number of Irish people reporting that they are avoiding the news, to 41%, the proportion of people avoiding the news is much higher than it was in 2017 when just 28% were doing so.
The report's authors noted that consumption of online news, including social media, is at its lowest point in a decade.
So why are people turning away from the news?
Reuters Institute researchers
, who have discovered the same trend across a number of countries, have previously noted that research in this area suggests people may be more engaged by other forms of online content,
such as short-form video
.
Other factors that may be at play include the deprioritisation of news on social media platforms, and negative personal perceptions of the news, particularly among people who left education after school; the decline in news engagement is steeper among this group.
Irish trust in the news
As well as being more interested in news compared with audiences in other countries, Irish people also have greater trust in news media.
Advertisement
While 50% of Irish people trust the news most of the time, the equivalent figure was 35% in the UK, 30% in the US, and 39% on average across a number of European countries.
Irish people are also more likely to pay for news, with 20% now doing so, up 3% in a year. This was particularly driven by people aged between 35 and 44. In the UK, just 10% of people pay for news.
More than two thirds of Irish people are concerned about what is real and what is fake online, with older people particularly worried.
More than half of respondents pointed the finger at social media platforms X, TikTok and Facebook as channels for false and misleading information, while just 17% said the same about news websites. Over half of Irish respondents believed online influencers and personalities posed a thread when it came to false and misleading information.
Irish people were more likely than those in other jurisdictions surveyed to trust journalists not to disseminated false and misleading information.
The survey found fact-checking – verifying the accuracy of public claims and statements – was seen by audiences as an important action the news media can undertake to improve trust.
The Journal's FactCheck unit
was noted as the only verified Irish signatory of the
International Fact-Checking Network
.
The Journal
The Journal was the second most used online news outlet, with just over one in four respondents indicating they had read it in the past week, behind only RTÉ on 36%. BreakingNews.ie and the Irish Independent were the next most used, each at 22%.
The results for most frequently accessed sources of news online were similar, with 26% of people using RTÉ three or more times per week, followed by The Journal on 13% and the Irish Independent on 12%.
Offline, RTÉ TV and radio news were the most accessed sources of news, at 44% and 29% respectively, followed by Sky News at 27%.
Older audiences are the most reliant on radio news, with just 16% of people aged 18-24 using the radio as a source of news, as compared with over half of those aged 65 and older.
The percentage of respondents accessing news brands in the past week - 2025 (black) versus 2015 (brown).
Reuters Digital News Report
Reuters Digital News Report
Irish people are bigger consumers of news podcasts than people in the UK and other European countries on average. However, this is still very much a minority pursuit, with just 12% of Irish people reporting they had listened to a podcast as a source of news in the past week.
Artificial intelligence
Although a growing number of people indicated they would be comfortable with news produced mainly by AI with some human oversight, 45% of people believed AI would make news less trustworthy, while 40% said it would make the news less accurate.
Nevertheless, the survey pointed to an appetite for AI-powered features such as news summaries, or homepages customised based on readers' interests.
The survey of 2,000 people was conducted by pollsters from YouGov and Cint using an online questionnaire, a type of polling that tends to under-represent older and less affluent people, meaning online news consumption is likely to be over-represented in the results and traditional offline use under-represented.
The type of sampling used in the survey meant a change of 2 percentage points or less was unlikely to be statistically significant.
The research was undertaken by the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism at the University of Oxford, with analysis of the Irish data provided by the DCU Institute for Future Media, Democracy and Society. It was funded by Coimisiún na Meán.
Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone...
A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article.
Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation.
Learn More
Support The Journal

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cabinet gives NDRC one-year reprieve
Cabinet gives NDRC one-year reprieve

Irish Independent

timean hour ago

  • Irish Independent

Cabinet gives NDRC one-year reprieve

In 2024, the Department of Communications had decided to stop giving the programme an annual grant of €3.5m when the current contract ends in November, which was likely to lead to its closure. The decision was widely criticised, with 200 entrepreneurs writing an open letter to the Government calling for it to be reversed. Set up in 2006 as a collaboration between the State and the private sector, the NDRC has been run for the last five years by Dogpatch Labs and four regional partners. Today the Minister for Enterprise, Peter Burke, and the Minister for Communications, Patrick O'Donovan, announced that the Government had approved an extension of the NDRC with the current service provider, Dogpatch Labs, and that it will continue to give supports to early-stage digital enterprises until the end of 2026. Enterprise Ireland is planning to support 1,000 new start-ups by 2029, the Government announcement said, and will launch a successor National Accelerator Platform in 2026. This platform is in an advanced stage of development, and 'will reflect the new and evolving needs of founders, enhance sectoral diversification and international connectivity'. Mr O'Donovan said that NDRC had been a high-performing support for digital start-ups, providing mentoring, training and investments, and helping with the creation of high-value jobs. The Enterprise Minister, Mr Burke, added that the decision would ensure continuity of service, and provide a stable foundation for the long-terms successor being developed by Enterprise Ireland. 'We must continue to back the global ambition of Irish-founded innovation-led start-ups, particularly in a challenging global economic climate,' he said. 'To do so, my Department through Enterprise Ireland will develop a system-wide approach that accelerates start-up growth, internationalisation, and scaling.' The decision is intended to provide certainty to firms that have been helped by the NDRC, and to ensure there is no interruption in State support for the digital sector. An independent review of the NDRC, submitted to the Department of Communications in June 2024 but only published in December, was overwhelmingly positive about its operation. The Department had commissioned Indecon to examine whether Dogpatch's contract should be extended for another two years. The consultants concluded that Dogpatch Labs should get a two-year extension, as the evidence pointed to 'substantive achievement of the NDRC's strategic objectives' between late 2020 and the end of 2022. 'The analysis also found satisfactory outputs and outcomes, as well as improvements compared to the previous operator,' said the Indecon report, which was received last June but only posted on almost six months later.

Poll finds public turning to AI bots for news updates
Poll finds public turning to AI bots for news updates

RTÉ News​

time2 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Poll finds public turning to AI bots for news updates

People are increasingly turning to generative artificial intelligence chatbots like ChatGPT to follow day-to-day news, a respected media report published today found. The yearly survey from the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism found "for the first time" that significant numbers of people were using chatbots to get headlines and updates, director Mitali Mukherjee wrote. Attached to Britain's Oxford University, the Reuters Institute annual report is seen as unmissable for people following the evolution of media. Just 7% of people report using AI to find news, according to the poll of 97,000 people in 48 countries, carried out by YouGov. But the proportion is higher among the young, at 12% of under-35s and 15% of under-25s. The biggest-name chatbot - OpenAI's ChatGPT - is the most widely used, followed by Google's Gemini and Meta's Llama. Respondents appreciated relevant, personalised news from chatbots. Many more used AI to summarise (27%), translate (24%) or recommend (21%) articles, while almost one in five asked questions about current events. Distrust remains, with those polled on balance saying AI risked making the news less transparent, less accurate and less trustworthy. Rather than being programmed, today's powerful AI 'large language models' (LLMs) are 'trained' on vast quantities of data from the web and other sources - including news media like text articles or video reports. Once trained, they are able to generate text and images in response to users' natural-language queries. But they present problems including 'hallucinations' - the term used when AI invents information that fits patterns in their training data but is not true. Scenting a chance at revenue in a long-squeezed market, some news organisations have struck deals to share their content with developers of AI models. Agence France-Presse (AFP) allows the platform of French AI firm Mistral to access its archive of news stories going back decades. Other media have launched copyright cases against AI makers over alleged illegal use of their content, for example the New York Times against ChatGPT developer OpenAI. The Reuters Institute report also pointed to traditional media - TV, radio, newspapers and news sites - losing ground to social networks and video-sharing platforms. Almost half of 18-24-year-olds report that social media like TikTok is their main source of news, especially in emerging countries like India, Brazil, Indonesia and Thailand. The institute found that many are still using Elon Musk-owned social media platform X for news, despite a rightward shift since the world's richest man took it over. "Many more right-leaning people, notably young men, have flocked to the network, while some progressive audiences have left or are using it less frequently," the authors wrote.

IT.ie targets €10m in revenue as it acquires Abacus in seven-figure deal
IT.ie targets €10m in revenue as it acquires Abacus in seven-figure deal

Irish Examiner

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

IT.ie targets €10m in revenue as it acquires Abacus in seven-figure deal

Managed IT services company has acquired fellow Dublin firm Abacus Systems in a seven-figure deal. Following the deal, the company is forecasting revenues to exceed its previous target of €8m, reaching €10m by the end of 2025. Its workforce, meanwhile, will grow to a team of more than 50. Based in south Dublin, Abacus Systems was established in 1992 by Derek O'Callaghan and has worked with corporates, public sector organisations, healthcare providers, and SMEs on managed services, cloud technologies, cybersecurity, and compliance. Eamon Gallagher established in 2004. It provides managed IT services, cloud solutions, and cybersecurity services to organisations around Ireland. The company said the acquisition was independent of private equity and was self-funded by It now plans to expand its customer base by over 50% to more than 500 clients. Eamon Gallagher said: 'The acquisition of Abacus Systems marks a key moment in our success and is another milestone in our journey to becoming a leading force in the managed IT services space. It firmly strengthens our position within the market, allowing us to offer an even greater portfolio of services and deeper expertise to facilitate our growing customer base. 'The acquisition unites two companies built with the same core values. For us, the partnership goes beyond growth and is an opportunity to learn from one another and build on our existing expertise together." Derek O'Callaghan, managing director of the Abacus Division, said: 'This acquisition isn't just great news for our business, but also our customers. "Regardless of size, every business needs to be a resilient, digital enterprise and we are proud to have joined forces with to work as one team in delivering this for combined customer base. In terms of services and our cultures, we complement each other and are excited to be on this journey together. 'IT is becoming more complex and that is likely to see more pooling of resources of this kind. The IT industry is consolidating and getting stronger, and we are bringing that strength to our customers," he said. Read More Irish fintech Paynt which specialises in 'tipping' technology makes Canadian acquisition

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store