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Business Insider recommended nonexistent books to staff as it leans into AI

2025-06-02 00:09:00 英文原文

作者:Max TaniMedia Editor, Semafor

Business Insider announced this week that it wants staff to better incorporate AI into its journalism.

But less than a year ago, the company had to quietly apologize to some staff for accidentally recommending that they read books that did not appear to exist but instead may have been generated by AI.

In an email to staff last May, a senior editor at Business Insider sent around a list of what she called “Beacon Books,” a list of memoirs and other acclaimed business nonfiction books, with the idea of ensuring staff understood some of the fundamental figures and writing powering good business journalism.

Many of the recommendations were well-known recent business, media, and tech nonfiction titles such as Too Big To Fail by Andrew Ross Sorkin, DisneyWar by James Stewart, and Super Pumped by Mike Isaac.

But a few were unfamiliar to staff. Simply Target: A CEO’s Lessons in a Turbulent Time and Transforming an Iconic Brand by former Target CEO Gregg Steinhafel was nowhere to be found. Neither was Jensen Huang: the Founder of Nvidia, which was supposedly published by the company Charles River Editors in 2019. Semafor could not find any evidence that either book exists.

The list also recommended a book called Mark Zuckerberg Autobiography: The Man Behind the Code, supposedly written by an author named Jasper Robin. While a Goodreads page exists for the book, which claims it is only 61 pages long, the page has no reviews or other information. It is not available for purchase on Amazon or from any other retailers.

Another recommendation was The House of Morgan: An Intimate Portrait of the Most Powerful Banking Family in the World by Fredric Morgan, though no such book exists. The company likely meant to recommend The House of Morgan: An American Banking Dynasty and the Rise of Modern Finance by Ron Chernow. Snapchat 101: Everything You Need to Know about Snapchat for Business by Andrew MacCarthy was on the list of suggested reads, though no such book exists. (BI could have been meaning to recommend Snapchat 101: Everything You Need to Know to Get Started on Snapchat: Or, How to Use Snapchat Like a Teen by Scott Perry, a how-to guide for how to use the photo messaging platform.)

The company also recommended The Costco Experience: An Unofficial Survivor’s Guide by someone named Celeste Olivier, published in 2008. The real version was written by Larry Gerston in 2003.

A Business Insider spokesperson declined to comment.

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摘要

Business Insider aims to integrate AI into its journalism more effectively but faced an incident last year where a senior editor accidentally recommended non-existent books that might have been generated by AI, leading to confusion among staff and the need for an internal apology. The erroneous book recommendations included titles like "Simply Target" by Gregg Steinhafel, "Jensen Huang: The Founder of Nvidia," and others that do not exist or are incorrectly referenced.

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