================================================================================ ARTICLE: Newsroom AI Policy: A Practical Template for Editors URL: https://omniscient.news/blog/ai-newsroom-policy-template-editors Published: 2026-03-22 Updated: 2026-04-01 Category: Practical Guides Tags: newsroom AI policy, AI editorial standards, journalism ethics AI, AI disclosure, editor guide ================================================================================ Every newsroom using AI tools needs a clear AI policy covering accuracy standards, disclosure requirements, prohibited uses, and editorial accountability. Here is a practical template. Why Every Newsroom Needs an AI Policy As AI tools become integrated into every stage of the journalism workflow — research, writing, fact-checking, editing, distribution — the question of how editorial teams should use these tools responsibly has moved from theoretical to urgent. The cases that have damaged newsroom credibility in the AI era — CNET's quietly AI-generated articles with factual errors, Sports Illustrated's content attributed to fictitious authors, legal cases dismissed due to AI-fabricated citations — share a common element: the absence of a clear, enforced policy governing AI use. A newsroom AI policy does not need to be restrictive; it needs to be clear. The goal is to capture the efficiency and analytical benefits of AI tools while maintaining the accuracy standards, attribution integrity, and ethical principles that are the foundation of journalistic credibility. Core Elements of a Newsroom AI Policy 1. Approved Use Cases Define which AI use cases are explicitly approved: research summarisation (with verification requirement), transcription (with accuracy review requirement), background data analysis (with source verification requirement), headline optimisation (with editorial approval), and multi-model fact-checking (using certified tools like Omniscient AI). This positive list clarifies what is permitted without restricting experimentation. 2. Prohibited Use Cases Define what AI may not be used for without additional authorisation: generating quotes attributed to real individuals, producing published articles without substantial human editing, replacing named sources or expert attribution with AI-generated surrogates, or making editorial decisions about story selection without human editor approval. 3. Disclosure Requirements Define when AI use must be disclosed to audiences: when AI has generated substantial portions of published text; when AI-generated imagery is used; when AI-produced data analysis is the primary evidential basis for a story's claims. Most newsrooms now use disclosure labels such as "Assisted by AI" or "AI-assisted research" when appropriate, following AP and Reuters disclosure practices. 4. Accuracy Standards All factual claims generated or surfaced by AI tools must be independently verified against primary sources before publication. No statistic, quote, or attributed claim may be published based solely on AI output. AI-generated text must be reviewed by a named human editor who takes editorial responsibility for the accuracy of the published piece. 5. Data Privacy and Source Protection No source-identifying information, confidential document content, or sensitive investigation material may be input into external commercial AI services (ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini APIs) without legal review. For sensitive work, only self-hosted, privacy-preserving AI tools (local Llama 3, Whisper) may be used. Frequently Asked Questions Q: What should a newsroom AI policy include? A: A newsroom AI policy should cover: approved use cases (with verification requirements), prohibited uses, disclosure requirements for audiences, accuracy standards (independent verification of AI-generated claims), data privacy and source protection rules, training requirements for staff, and accountability/oversight mechanisms. Q: Which major newsrooms have published AI policies? A: The AP, Reuters, BBC, New York Times, The Guardian, Financial Times, NPR, and many regional news organisations have published internal or public AI use policies. Most are available on their respective editorial standards pages. Q: Is there a universal standard for AI disclosure in journalism? A: There is no universal legal standard as of 2026, but several professional standards bodies have published guidance: the AP's AI use guidelines, the SPJ's (Society of Professional Journalists) statement on AI, and UNESCO's Journalism, 'Fake News' & Disinformation handbook all address AI disclosure. The EU AI Act creates some disclosure obligations for AI-generated content under its Transparency requirements. Q: What is the most important clause in an AI policy? A: The accuracy clause — requiring independent human verification of all AI-generated factual claims before publication — is the most critical clause. Most AI journalism credibility failures trace to publishing AI output without this verification step. Q: How should newsrooms train staff on AI policies? A: Effective AI policy training combines written policy documentation with hands-on tool workshops, case study review of AI journalism failures (CNET, Sports Illustrated), regular policy update briefings as technology evolves, and clear accountability channels for staff to report AI-related concerns or uncertainty.