It takes 20 years to build a reputation…

Enrique Dans
Enrique Dans
Published in
2 min readMar 6, 2024

--

IMAGE: A hand throwing a piece of paper with the word CNET into a trash can
IMAGE: OpenAI’s DALL·E, via ChatGPT

Created in 1992, CNET, short for Computer Network, was once a respected outlet for news about technology that was bought by CBS in 2008 for $1.75 billion.

In 2020, CNET changed hands again, this time, with the golden age of native advertising on the internet over, Red Ventures paid just $500 million for the company. Red Ventures specializes in content designed to rank highly in Google searches, and then monetizes that traffic with lucrative affiliate links.

Fears that the acquisition might not bode well for the prestige and credibility of CNET have been confirmed now that the best and most complete encyclopedia ever created, Wikipedia, has lowered the reliability score it had assigned to CNET after finding poor-quality articles that had clearly been written by generative algorithms and published without almost any oversight, sometimes even including verbatim the characteristic and recognizable last paragraph that some algorithms usually have.

Using generative algorithms for news writing could be appealing if your goal is to publish a large number of articles to attract clicks on your sponsored links, but it’s not a sustainable strategy. In principle, there is nothing wrong with using generative algorithms for certain tasks, but as I have already mentioned a number of times, the time you save on writing, you spend on editing…

--

--

Enrique Dans
Enrique Dans

Professor of Innovation at IE Business School and blogger (in English here and in Spanish at enriquedans.com)