Boston Celtics' Brandon Hunter and Detroit Pistons' Corliss Williamson
Brandon Hunter, left, played for the Boston Celtics and Orlando Magic during his time in the NBA. The cause of his sudden death remains unclear.
  • MSN readers called out the site for publishing a story they believe was written by AI.
  • The story's headline describes the late NBA player Brandon Hunter as "useless."
  • Microsoft has previously been called out for poorly worded articles that suggest the work of AI.

When Microsoft's MSN published a story on the unexpected death of a former NBA player, readers called out the strangely written article for being the work of artificial intelligence.

"Brandon Hunter useless at 42," the headline read.

It described Hunter as a "former NBA participant" who was "handed away on the age of 42." The article was unintelligible at parts, and simply poorly worded at others

"Hunter's expertise led to his choice because the 56th general decide within the 2003 NBA Draft," the story read.

Readers took to X, formerly Twitter, and Reddit to point out the now-deleted obituary for its odd wording.

"AI should not be writing obituaries. Pay your damn writers MSN," one X user posted.

A Redditor speculated that the story may have been translated to another language then back to English to avoid detection for plagiarism.

"Wouldn't surprise me if they did, but it feels like an intentionally bad google translate to get around plagiarism," their comment read. "As the article was literally posted the same hour as other articles reporting on the same issue. And it feels like a bad google translate of the others."

A spokesperson for Microsoft didn't confirm nor deny that the article was generated by AI, but assured that it's been taken down from the MSN site.

"The accuracy of the content we publish from our partners is important to us, and we continue to enhance our systems to identify and prevent inaccurate information from appearing on our channels. The story in question has been removed," a Microsoft spokesperson told Insider. 

Last month, Microsoft removed a handful of articles from its site made with "algorithmic techniques." One guide included the Ottawa Food Bank as a recommended attraction for tourists to visit.

TMZ reported Hunter's death on Tuesday. The former athlete played for the Boston Celtics and Orlando Magic during his NBA career. The circumstances of his sudden death remain unclear.

Read the original article on Business Insider