Kenka
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I guess I am... gutted. Both L'Equipe and Footmercato are producing articles that cover the latest sports events.
Lately, I couldn't help but notice that there have been errors in the highest-profile articles that should simply not be there, period. The Bayern-Borussia match of today is a good example of that: the summary article on l'Equipe came up few minutes after the game finished and the final scoreline, which literally was mentioned in the opening, was wrong.
Unthinkable for an outlet of this reputation.
Footmercato's article on its end, featured a grammatical mistake that no junior high school student in France/Canada/West Africa would ever do. The paragraph flow was wrong and the text seemed to be filled of contiguous sentences that paraphrased the ones immediately before, giving the impression that the writer was repeating itself.
I am dreading a situation in which real people like you and I - who browse websites and are exposed to advertising - contribute to filling the pockets of companies that have no employees. Imagine how dramatically fast the gap in inequality will grow between those who own a website and their workers. The former will steadily reap more and more of the benefits of having AI do the job instead of employees and those who were laid off will never have any share of the income made in the industry they worked in ever again.
Lately, I couldn't help but notice that there have been errors in the highest-profile articles that should simply not be there, period. The Bayern-Borussia match of today is a good example of that: the summary article on l'Equipe came up few minutes after the game finished and the final scoreline, which literally was mentioned in the opening, was wrong.
Unthinkable for an outlet of this reputation.
Footmercato's article on its end, featured a grammatical mistake that no junior high school student in France/Canada/West Africa would ever do. The paragraph flow was wrong and the text seemed to be filled of contiguous sentences that paraphrased the ones immediately before, giving the impression that the writer was repeating itself.
I am dreading a situation in which real people like you and I - who browse websites and are exposed to advertising - contribute to filling the pockets of companies that have no employees. Imagine how dramatically fast the gap in inequality will grow between those who own a website and their workers. The former will steadily reap more and more of the benefits of having AI do the job instead of employees and those who were laid off will never have any share of the income made in the industry they worked in ever again.
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