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-- | AI: What Radio Must Know Now
Lenawee Broadcasting President Julie Koehn didn't sugarcoat it: "We have [competitors] that steal our news." And she meant literally -- lifting her station's local reporting and republishing it. |
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It's an age old problem accelerated by new technology.
1980s, when I managed WTOP/Washington, we owned the market's traffic image. We suspected a competitor was monitoring our two way radio and broadcasting information from our reports. We told them to knock it off. They didn't. So we had our airborne reporter feed a false report to our editor's desk...and the competitor fell for it. Problem solved. Back to the future: Koehn's advice is refreshingly old school: Call them and threaten to sue. AI hasn't changed the fact that copyright still exists. The Bigger Minefield: What WE do with AI
Townsquare Media Senior VP/Digital Products Sun Sachs emphasized that his company has "a lot of guardrails. Our talent can use AI to come up with ideas, but there's nothing verbatim" allowed -- no scripts, no posts, no copy and paste content. Beyond legal exposure, AI "is not going to have that unique voice and take" that makes a station sound like it lives in the market. Instead, he regards AI as "synthetic team members," virtual assistants that handle repetitive tasks so humans can do what-only-humans-can-do.
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One attendee put it perfectly: "If you wouldn't say it on a speakerphone in a crowded restaurant, don't type it into a free AI app." Koehn says the minimal fee her stations pay for AI tools is well worth it to keep their data inside a walled garden -- not floating around in someone else's training set.
Political Ads: Handle With Care
Bottom Line?
If you missed any of this week's NAB Show updates, click here. |
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Copyright 2026 Holland Cooke |