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The Dangers of “Vibe Reporting” About AI

Last week, news broke that Amazon would be laying off 16,000 workers. Here was the headline ​from an article​ about this news published in Quartz:

The implication of this framing is clear: AI is taking jobs.

Nothing in the body of this article contradicts this idea. It describes the number of people laid off and the benefits they’ll receive. It quotes executives who won’t deny the possibility of future job losses. It mentions how Amazon is known for its “cutthroat” corporate culture.

You walk away feeling that the impact of AI on our economy is already getting out of hand.

The only problem is that this reporting omits almost all relevant details.

For a more realistic take, let’s turn toward the financial press. CNBC published ​an article​ about these same layoffs featuring a more informative headline:

The article goes on to correctly attribute the layoffs to Amazon’s desire to trim layers of management bureaucracy that built up during the pandemic-era tech hiring boom: “CEO Andy Jassy has looked to slim down Amazon’s workforce after the company went on a hiring spree during the Covid-19 pandemic.”

What role does AI play in all of this? Like many leading companies in the technology sector, Amazon is investing heavily in building its own AI products. Presumably, money is being saved by firing managers, which frees up more revenue to invest in this area. But that’s really it. As the CNBC article elaborates:

“In a blog post, the company wrote that the layoffs were part of an ongoing effort to ‘strengthen our organization by reducing layers, increasing ownership, and removing bureaucracy.’ That coincides with a push to invest heavily in artificial intelligence.” [emphasis mine]

The CNBC article then reports that these massive layoffs actually began for Amazon in 2022 and 2023, following the pandemic, but before ChatGPT was released and the subsequent generative AI revolution began.

Both of these articles cover the same announcement, but they produce two very different impressions. The Quartz article strongly implies that Amazon is firing people because it can now offload their work to AI. (I mean: look at the Andy Jassey quote they included in the sub-head, they clearly wanted readers to believe AI caused these job losses.)

The CNBC article, by contrast, makes it clear that the connection between AI and these layoffs is more coincident than causal.

In recent years, I’ve seen more articles follow the general approach demonstrated by the Quartz example. They identify an alarming,attention-catching fear about AI that seems prevalent in the cultural zeitgeist, and then shape a story to feed the narrative. The key to this vibe reporting strategy is that the articles never make explicit claims. They instead combine cunning omissions and loosely related quotes to make strong implications.

The Quartz article, for example, never concretely states that the 16,000 workers are being replaced with AI; rather, it conveniently avoids mentioning any of the publicly available details about the layoffs that would contradict that idea, and then interleaves quotes about AI’s disruptive potential into the reporting in a highly suggestive manner.

The goal of this type of article is to create a pre-ordained vibe, not to get to the bottom of what’s really happening.

I’m not pointing out this phenomenon to dismiss concerns about AI, but instead because I think this strategy is an obstacle to real action. This type of disingenuous reporting is not going to help us identify the actual problems that require actual solutions. It instead creates a nihilistic sense of inevitable disruption that might drive social media shares, but also numbs people and prevents meaningful responses.

Remember: Nothing about these tools is inevitable, and their impact is far from preordained. We don’t need vibes right now. Reality is too important.

9 thoughts on “The Dangers of “Vibe Reporting” About AI”

  1. Great article. I’m not too worried about the impact of AI: the more AI is pushed, the more human connection is needed. I had a conversation with a tutor who explained that AI has not disrupted their industry at all (as it should have, because students can have access to answers to their questions on a 24/7 basis with AI). The misleading title of the article is meant to generate views and reactions, and that fuels the social media industry which thrives on sensational news.

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  2. Vibe reporting = Corey Doctorow’s ensh*ttification spreading into the news media.

    Somehow, humans who care, have to exit the attention economy and resume normal life as it has been for millennia.l be for the internet. Which to me means looking out for your neighbors and being kind to those you encounter.

    The antidote (as you eloquently have written about, Cal): Slow down, disconnect, and stop letting fear and distraction consume us.

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  3. I hardly read any news at all.

    There’s so much sensationalist engagement bait out there that it’s a bit too hazardous to casually browse the front page of Google/social media for what’s going on in the world without this slop trying to opportunistically stick to you

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  4. Another aspect common to these sensationalist articles is denominator blindness. 16,000 is almost exactly 1% of Amazon’s workforce. Now saying “Amazon lays off 1% of workforce’s in effort to improve efficiency.” Will not garner many clicks. And that is what these headlines are all about.

    Reply
  5. Another aspect common to these sensationalist articles is denominator blindness. 16,000 is almost exactly 1% of Amazon’s workforce. Now saying “Amazon lays off 1% of workforce’s in effort to improve efficiency.” Will not garner many clicks. And that is what these headlines are all about.

    Reply
  6. “Remember: Nothing about these tools is inevitable, and their impact is far from preordained. We don’t need vibes right now. Reality is too important.” —

    Some Tech CEOs don’t care about reality and the impact on people and environment. The AI show must go on. In 2-5 years from now we will see and fact check.

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  7. This is not limited to reporting on AI. I have noticed that “vibe reporting” (did not know that term before your article) for pretty much every news story is the new journalistic norm. More often than not, even while watching my local news, I am left with many questions unanswered about whatever news they reported on. I am constantly frustrated by the lack of relevant details and information. It feels like no one asks the questions that I want answers to when it comes to reporting on the news, and instead the focus is all on whatever will instigate the strongest emotional reaction from the viewer/reader. Everything comes down to how many clicks/views/likes/shares one can get and less emphasis is on actual journalistic reporting of the facts. It would be great if consumers demanded the latter, but too few people realize that the power lies with us.

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