HomeOpinionReligion & EthicsSalt and light – local journalism in the Age of AI

Salt and light – local journalism in the Age of AI

Pope Leo XIV’s encyclical Magnifica Humanitas asks how human dignity can be safeguarded in an age shaped by artificial intelligence (AI), digital platforms and concentrated technological power. AI can serve human beings and the common good, but only when governed by ethical responsibility. It must not reduce people to data, displace human judgement or become an instrument of manipulation, exclusion and commercial domination.

This challenge resonates with the founding vision of the South Sydney Herald (SSH). First published in 2002 by South Sydney Uniting Church, the newspaper seeks to give voice to local people and concerns and to participate constructively in community life.

The SSH About Sheet describes this as a prophetic commitment to justice and neighbour-love. The church is challenged to understand “the gospel in journalistic mode”: to be salt and light, helping to bring about reconciliation, wholeness and justice while resisting divisiveness and sectarianism.

A longer Vision & Guidelines document (2011) gives this vocation a clear journalistic expression. Publishing a community newspaper is understood as a means of engaging residents, businesses, artists, activists, politicians and community organisations. It requires discerning genuine public interest from sensationalism and gossip and maintaining “strength of evidence over ferocity of opinion”.

That principle becomes especially urgent in the age of AI.

AI may assist journalists with research, transcription, translation, data analysis and routine production. Used responsibly, it can make information more accessible and help small publications work effectively. But it must remain in service of human dignity. It cannot replace verification, editorial accountability, local knowledge or the relationship of trust between a journalist and a community. Its use should be transparent, and its outputs tested for error, distortion and inherited bias.

The gospel images of salt and light offer an ethical framework.

Light makes visible. Good journalism brings to light what has been overlooked, obscured or deliberately hidden: beauty and achievement, but also exploitation, exclusion and institutional failure. It asks whose experience is missing, where power is operating invisibly and what facts must be established.

Salt preserves and sharpens. Local journalism keeps memories, cultures and identities from being dissolved into a generic urban product. It does not invent the character of a community; it helps people recognise what is already present in particular lives, streets, histories and relationships.

Together, salt and light suggest journalism that is neither publicity nor relentless exposure. It reveals, preserves and intensifies the life of a place.

Leo calls for communication marked by “a clarity that sheds light and a frankness that unlocks new possibilities”. This means clarity without humiliation and frankness without foreclosure: reporting that may challenge or disturb, yet does not treat any person as disposable.

A guiding editorial question might therefore be: “Does this story shed light without humiliation, speak frankly without sealing off possibility, and help the community recognise the dignity of those involved?”

In the age of AI, the South Sydney Herald’s vocation remains deeply human: to help life together become more visible, truthful and capable of hope.

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