Keio University's X Dignity Center has released a proposal emphasizing the critical role of news organizations in the AI era, amid concerns that AI-driven changes in the information space threaten democracy. The document, unveiled on January 26, 2026, calls for reaffirming media's social responsibilities and transparency.
Keio University's X Dignity Center, part of the Global Research Institute, released the "Proposal on the Role of News Organizations in the AI Era" on January 26, 2026. The document was compiled by a panel of experts in constitutional law, social media analysis, and related fields, focusing on human dignity in the age of artificial intelligence.
The preamble highlights how AI, particularly social media algorithms, amplifies provocative misinformation and defamatory content under the "attention economy," where individual attention is commodified. This transformation endangers democracy, which depends on fact-based rational discourse. News organizations must provide verified information guided by professional ethics to avert this crisis, the proposal argues.
It outlines seven key functions and roles, including reaffirming social responsibilities and public functions; ensuring transparency and accountability in reporting; and developing AI utilization policies and guidelines. During elections and natural disasters, news outlets should verify questionable information and actively correct or supplement it to prevent confusion.
The proposal also urges scrutiny of digital platforms that wield significant influence over public decision-making through AI design, labeling them as "new powers potentially rivaling state authority." News organizations should maintain distance from the attention economy, implement governance measures, and engage in oversight of AI technologies.
At a press conference on the university's Mita Campus in Tokyo, co-director Prof. Tatsuhiko Yamamoto said, "We want to realize this proposal with the media outlets that have agreed to support it. We also hope to engage in dialogue with platforms and the younger generation."
The initiative stems from deliberations by the Expert Panel on the Soundness of the Information Space, featuring academics from Keio University, the University of Tokyo, and others. It emphasizes rebuilding trust through transparency and cross-generational dialogue on media literacy.