×
Apple halts AI news summaries for continuing to spread misinformation
Written by
Published on
Join our daily newsletter for breaking news, product launches and deals, research breakdowns, and other industry-leading AI coverage
Join Now

Key changes and updates: Apple has temporarily suspended AI-generated notification summaries for news and entertainment applications in the latest iOS 18.3 developer beta while addressing accuracy concerns.

  • The suspension specifically targets news and entertainment app categories, with plans to restore functionality in a future update once underlying issues are resolved
  • New warning labels now appear in Settings, explicitly stating that “Summaries may contain errors” for apps where the feature remains active
  • AI-generated content will be displayed in italics to clearly differentiate it from text originated by news outlets or app developers

Enhanced user controls: A new set of features provides users with greater control over their notification experience and AI-generated content.

  • Users can now manage notification summaries directly from the lock screen by swiping left on individual summaries
  • The swipe gesture allows users to enable or disable AI summarization on a per-app basis
  • These controls offer more granular management of which apps can utilize AI-generated summaries

Background context: Recent accuracy issues with the AI summary feature have prompted Apple to implement these changes.

  • The BBC recently reported errors in AI-generated summaries, including a significant mistake regarding an alleged shooter
  • Apple has acknowledged these concerns and committed to improving the system based on user feedback
  • The company is actively working to provide clearer indication of AI-generated content

Looking ahead: While Apple’s temporary suspension of certain AI summary features represents a setback, the introduction of new controls and transparency measures suggests a measured approach to balancing innovation with accuracy in AI-powered features.

Apple Pauses AI Notification Summaries That Spread Fake News

Recent News

Musk-backed DOGE project targets federal workforce with AI automation

DOGE recruitment effort targets 300 standardized roles affecting 70,000 federal employees, sparking debate over AI readiness for government work.

AI tools are changing workflows more than they are cutting jobs

Counterintuitively, the Danish study found that ChatGPT and similar AI tools created new job tasks for workers and saved only about three hours of labor monthly.

Disney abandons Slack after hacker steals terabytes of confidential data using fake AI tool

A Disney employee fell victim to malware disguised as an AI art tool, enabling the hacker to steal 1.1 terabytes of confidential data and forcing the company to abandon Slack entirely.