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  • Axios NW Arkansas

    AI enters Northwest Arkansas' local news and party scene

    By Worth Sparkman,

    3 hours ago

    Jay Price could make your worst nightmares come true. Think robot revolution and AI overlords.

    • Fortunately, he's super affable and talks with the joy of a kid at Christmas. He's not likely to flip on Terminator's SkyNet .

    Why it matters: Price, who runs NWA Apps as his full-time job, uses "bots" to scrape the internet, then create artificial intelligence-generated content for a local news site ( OkayNWA.com ) and an events-calendar app ( OkayNWA ).


    Each entry is accompanied by a piece of AI-generated art as a visual representation.

    State of play: Price launched the app about a year ago as a try at resolving a common gripe among NWA newbies and younger people looking to socialize. "Nobody had built an app to tell you what was going on," he said.

    • But, "I would get events … [from the bots, and] sometimes events are news and sometimes news are events," Price said, using an example of a new-beer release at a local bar, saying it's, "like an event, but it's more news."
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1FgE91_0vBKkJim00 Screenshot of OkayNWA.com.

    Between the lines: As an afterthought, he created the news site, mostly to see if he could and to play with various technologies.

    • Items the software deems as news get sent to the virtual newsroom, where one of eight beat-reporter bots creates a story.
    • Benjamin Business covered pickleball and downtown Rogers development; Eva Eventful covered craft beer and Razorback basketball; Arlo Artiste , the arts.
    • It has ended up being real-world marketing for his bread-and-butter business, Price said.

    Threat level: Watchdog NewsGuard has identified more than 1,000 unreliable, AI-generated news websites globally that seed misinformation, and dark money is behind partisan sites masquerading as unbiased news — especially in election swing states.

    • Reality check: Price makes it clear on the news site that stories are AI-generated. He isn't trying to pass it off as uniquely human-generated content and he steers clear of heavy content, keeping it lighthearted.

    Backstory: Price is the quintessential resident NWA is trying to attract. During the pandemic, he packed a guitar and clothes and left his home in Cleveland.

    • He spent much of the COVID-19 pandemic on the road, doing contract software development from Airbnbs in Maine, Florida and Texas.
    • As he was leaving Fort Worth, Texas, a couple of years ago, he turned east rather than west, thinking of a short visit to Cleveland. "I was going from Tulsa to St Louis; I was like, 'Well, let me check out this Ozarks place. They got that show about it,'" he said, referring to " Ozark ."
    • After seeing the area's mountain bike trails, plus all it had to offer for business and quality of life, he decided to come back and stay — at least for now.

    What's next: The app has about 5,000 daily users, Price said. He's weighing options about how to monetize OkayNWA but hasn't settled on a route.

    • "Once you start taking checks from people, it changes the game," he said.
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