Today in News History

On July 12, several notable moments in the history of News stand out. In 1948, Richard Simmons, American fitness trainer and actor (died 2024) was born. In 1969, Anne-Sophie Pic, French chef was born. In 1973, Lon Chaney Jr., American actor (born 1906) passed away. In 1992, Luke Berry, English footballer was born. In 2007, U.S. Army Apache helicopters engage in airstrikes against armed insurgents in Baghdad, Iraq, where civilians are killed; footage from the cockpit is later leaked to the Internet. In 2008, Tony Snow, American journalist, 26th White House Press Secretary (born 1955) passed away. In 2012, A tank truck explosion kills more than 100 people in Okobie, Nigeria. In 2012, Dara Singh, Indian wrestler, actor, and politician (born 1928) passed away. In 2014, Emil Bobu, Romanian politician (born 1927) passed away. In 2015, Cheng Siwei, Chinese engineer, economist, and politician (born 1935) passed away. Together, these milestones provide historical context for today's news news and ongoing narratives.

People training new AI models admit they just get chatbots to do it

New Scientist

New Scientist

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June 22, 2026

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People training new AI models admit they just get chatbots to do it

The next generation of AI models are meant to be trained by people paid to have conversations with them, but several of these workers have admitted to New Scientist that they simply get chatbots to do it instead. This AI inbreeding may reduce the power and usefulness of future models, warn experts

Narrative Intelligence Brief

This article was published by New Scientist, a source frequently categorized with a center bias based in United States of America. Our narrative intelligence engine continuously monitors coverage from this outlet to track framing, bias, and rhetorical patterns. Our initial algorithmic scan of this specific piece did not flag high-confidence rhetorical techniques, suggesting a generally straightforward reporting style or neutral framing. By understanding the editorial perspective of New Scientist, readers can better contextualize the information presented and compare it across our broader media matrix to find the real narrative.

Analysis Methodology
This narrative analysis was generated using the CoDataLab Global Intelligence Engine. Our proprietary AI scans thousands of cross-border sources to identify sentiment patterns, framing techniques, and potential media bias. While AI provides the data-driven foundation, our objective is to empower readers with additional context beyond the standard headline.The content displayed above is a structured summary designed for rapid information processing. For the full original report, please visit the source outlet.

How other outlets are covering this story

Compare narratives across 6 related reports from 6 sources. Real Narrative News aggregates the coverage spectrum so you can see who emphasises what — bias tags reflect the outlet, not the story.

Coverage bias distribution

6 sources

Left 33%

Center 50%

Right 0%


Brisbane Times

center

· Jul 4, 2026

How artificial intelligence got better at building itself

The latest generation of AI models are such competent coders, engineers and (soon) scientists that many worry they may be among the last ever made by humans.

The Hacker News

Unknown

· Jul 8, 2026

New HalluSquatting Attack Could Trick AI Coding Assistants Into Installing Botnet Malware

AI coding assistants have a habit of making things up. Ask one to fetch a popular tool, and it will sometimes hand back a real-sounding name for a project that does not exist. New research, which its authors call HalluSquatting, turns that habit into an attack: work out the fake names an AI reliably invents, register them first, and wait for the assistant to fetch your trap on a user's

South China Morning Post

lean left

· Jun 30, 2026

Why the AI future won’t be decided by algorithms and chatbots

When people talk about the race for artificial intelligence, they usually focus on software. Headlines revolve around ChatGPT, Gemini, DeepSeek or the latest breakthrough model. Governments announce AI strategies and investors pour billions into start-ups promising to transform everything from medicine to education. Nonetheless, the most consequential battle in the AI age may not be over algorithms at all. It may be over the machines. Behind every chatbot response and AI-generated image lies a...

KSAT San Antonio

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· Jun 23, 2026

All the world's a robot-staging ground for tech entrepreneurs building 'physical AI'

AI world models are the next frontier for computer scientists who see too many limitations in the AI language models behind popular chatbots.

Decrypt

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· Jul 9, 2026

AI Agents Could Be Turned Into Botnets Through Hallucinations, Researchers Warn

Researchers warn AI agents could be tricked into downloading malicious code by exploiting the same hallucinations that cause chatbots to make mistakes.

Wired

lean left

· Jun 21, 2026

28 Tips to Take Your ChatGPT Prompts to the Next Level

Sure, anyone can use OpenAI’s chatbot. But with smart engineering, you can get way more interesting results.

Topics:

Politics · 2
Technology · 2
World · 1
Lifestyle · 1

Related coverage for "People training new AI models admit they just get chatbots to do it": Brisbane Times — How artificial intelligence got better at building itself. The Hacker News — New HalluSquatting Attack Could Trick AI Coding Assistants Into Installing Botnet Malware. South China Morning Post — Why the AI future won’t be decided by algorithms and chatbots. KSAT San Antonio — All the world's a robot-staging ground for tech entrepreneurs building 'physical AI'. Decrypt — AI Agents Could Be Turned Into Botnets Through Hallucinations, Researchers Warn. Wired — 28 Tips to Take Your ChatGPT Prompts to the Next Level