Microsoft is to replace dozens of contract journalists on its MSN website and use automated systems to select news stories, according to BBC who quoted US and UK media report.
The report said this measure does not affect full time journalists on the tech giant’s payroll.
The curating of stories from news organisations and selection of headlines and pictures for the MSN site is currently done by journalists.
Artificial intelligence will perform these news production tasks, sources told the Seattle Times.
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Microsoft said it was part of an evaluation of its business.
The US tech giant is one of many tech companies experimenting with forms of so-called robot journalism to cut costs.
Google is also investing in projects to understand how it might work.
Microsoft said in a statement: “Like all companies, we evaluate our business on a regular basis.
“This can result in increased investment in some places and, from time to time, redeployment in others.
“These decisions are not the result of the current pandemic.”
Microsoft, like some other tech companies, pays news organisations to use their content on its website.
But it employs journalists to decide which stories to display and how they are presented.
Around 50 contract news producers will lose their jobs at the end of June, the Seattle Times reports, but a team of full-time journalists will remain.
“It’s demoralising to think machines can replace us but there you go,” one of those facing redundancy told the paper.
Some sacked journalists warned that artificial intelligence may not be fully familiar with strict editorial guidelines, and could end up letting through inappropriate stories.
Twenty-seven of those losing their jobs are employed by the UK’s PA Media, the Guardian reports.
One journalist quoted in the paper said: “I spend all my time reading about how automation and AI is going to take all our jobs – now it’s taken mine.”