Ars Technica Fires Senior Reporter After AI-Fabricated Quotes Scandal
Original: Ars Technica fires reporter after AI controversy involving fabricated quotes View original →
The Incident
Senior AI reporter Benj Edwards has been terminated by Ars Technica following a retracted article that contained AI-generated fabricated quotes. The February 13 piece covered an AI agent security incident involving engineer Scott Shambaugh — who objected to quotes he never made appearing in the story.
How It Happened
Edwards, working while ill with a fever, attempted to use AI tools to extract and organize source material from his reporting. The process inadvertently produced fabricated quotations that he failed to catch before publication. Editor-in-chief Ken Fisher confirmed the article contained fabricated quotations generated by an AI tool and attributed to a source who did not say them, calling it a serious failure of editorial standards.
Fallout and Response
By February 28, Edwards' profile on Ars Technica had been changed to past tense, confirming his departure. Edwards himself acknowledged making an unintentional serious journalistic error and stated he should have taken a sick day. He stressed that co-author Kyle Orland bore no responsibility. Ars Technica announced plans to publish explicit guidelines on AI tool use in journalism.
Broader Implications
This case highlights a critical risk in the growing use of AI tools in newsrooms: AI-generated text can subtly introduce fabrications that are difficult to catch without rigorous verification. As AI assistants become more integrated into editorial workflows, publications need explicit policies distinguishing between acceptable AI assistance and dangerous automation of fact-sensitive processes like quote extraction and attribution.
Related Articles
Anthropic has officially rejected the Pentagon's latest proposal, stating 'We cannot in good conscience accede to their request.' The move underscores Anthropic's position on AI safety principles and the tension between powerful AI capabilities and military applications.
OpenAI announced on X that Codex Security has entered research preview. The company positions it as an application security agent that can detect, validate, and patch complex vulnerabilities with more context and less noise.
OpenAI said on X on March 9 that it plans to acquire Promptfoo, an AI security platform, and keep the project open source. The deal strengthens OpenAI Frontier’s agentic testing and evaluation stack.
Comments (0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!