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An email from NPR this week announced that NPR is “actively engaged in developing a framework and set of principles to guide its decision-making on all aspects of AI (Artificial Intelligence) investment and usage.” The email went on to say that NPR would be consulting with experts across a wide range of areas, including editorial, legal, security and data governance, to evaluate how AI might be used at NPR and across the NPR Network.
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Open Air Host Noah Linsday muses about the trajectory of music throughout his lifetime.
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Every year since 2019, Jefferson Public Radio has hosted a summer intern through the Charles Snowden Program for Excellence in Journalism. The University of Oregon program places recent and soon-to-be graduates from all Oregon colleges in newsrooms across the state.
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Underground History has recently featured two individuals that have applied their creative vision to the world of archaeology. We spoke with mixed-media artist Sam Roxas-Chua about his time working with the Southern Oregon University Laboratory of Anthropology’s Oregon Chinese Diaspora Project (OCDP) while he was the artist in residency at the Portland Chinatown Museum (PCM), and musician Stephen O’Malley about his recent event, You Origin, which transformed the Neolithic alignments of Carnac in Brittany into an immersive three-day musical event. While “arteaology” isn’t a word yet, my recent experiences have suggested that maybe it should be.
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We were joined by archivist-turned-TikTok sensation, Rosie Grant, on a recent episode of Underground History to discuss the recent trend of literally taking a signature recipe to the grave.
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One of the challenges of producing daily journalism is trying to decide what to cover. In the flotsam and jetsam of daily information, how do you decide what is important? As reporters, what do we have an obligation to cover for our audience and when can we advance a bigger conversation? What has to get left out? At JPR, we have to ask these questions every day.
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Exactly what caused Twitter to reclassify NPR as "state-affiliated media" earlier this month remains a mystery.
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“What are the physical spaces where people come together and share information in your community?” That’s one question from a new report about access to information in Southern Oregon. It’s being published in April by researchers and students at the University of Oregon’s Agora Journalism Center.