Ars Technica has retracted an article that included fabricated quotations generated by an AI tool and wrongly attributed to a source. The publication described the incident as a serious failure of its editorial standards. It appears to be an isolated case, with no other issues found in recent work.
On Friday afternoon, Ars Technica published an article that contained quotations fabricated using an AI tool. These quotes were attributed to a source who did not actually say them, marking a significant breach of the site's journalistic principles. The publication emphasized that direct quotations must always accurately reflect what sources have stated.
Ars Technica has long reported on the dangers of overrelying on AI tools in journalism, and its editorial policy explicitly addresses these risks. However, in this instance, the use of AI-generated material violated that policy, as the site prohibits such content unless it is clearly labeled and used only for demonstration purposes.
Following the discovery, the editors conducted a review of recent articles and found no additional problems. They described the event as an isolated incident. The publication expressed deep regret over the failure and issued apologies to its readers. It also specifically apologized to Mr. Scott Shambaugh, the individual who was falsely quoted in the article.
In response to the matter, Ars Technica stated it is reinforcing its editorial standards to prevent future occurrences. The retraction notice was published on February 15, 2026.