Bramblethorn
Sleep-deprived
- Joined
- Feb 16, 2012
- Posts
- 16,859
I'm sure most teachers and editors have seen worse-written submissions from alleged humans.
I'm sure they have. I doubt many got professionally published, though.
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I'm sure most teachers and editors have seen worse-written submissions from alleged humans.
I amused myself in the early days of microprocessors by margin-correcting numerous tech guides, especially those published (for money) by Sybex. I'll attest that much undecipherable crud has made it onto the market. And we know some scholarly journals have published utter gibberish. And folks buy it. As a savant (HL Mencken?) said, nobody ever lost money by underestimating the intelligence of of the American people.I'm sure they have. I doubt many got professionally published, though.
FWIW, here is the "competent, really well-reasoned essay" they're talking about:
this qualifies as a good essay. i suspect that the AI writes the essay and then has it machine scored until it gets a good one.
that being said, my interest is more along the lines of stories and erotica. Even if the stories aren't perfect, would you think they'd rate a 4.5?
the AI is getting spelling, grammar and context right.
i know what i like and i know what authors i like and sadly my favorite authors rarely nail my favorite kinks. could this AI reliably produce derivative fiction that fits my kinks?
Ben Franklin in Paris reputedly witnessed the first balloon ascents. A fellow bystander asked what use such nonsense was. Ben supposedly replied, "Of what use is a newborn baby?" AI is still pretty young, and lots more useful than in decades past. Expect AI to evolve faster than humans can handle.
I have always admired the artificial intelligencia. From a safe distance.Thought y'all might appreciate this, rather topical to our discussion: https://twitter.com/tomgauld/status/1099647527836680195/photo/1
Then there's the report from The Guardian (UK): New AI fake text generator may be too dangerous to release, say creators
The creators of a revolutionary AI system that can write news stories and works of fiction – dubbed “deepfakes for text” – have taken the unusual step of not releasing their research publicly, for fear of potential misuse.Like hand-dipped candles, writing by humans will be obsolete in the next generation.
OpenAI, an nonprofit research company backed by Elon Musk, Reid Hoffman, Sam Altman, and others, says its new AI model, called GPT2 is so good and the risk of malicious use so high that it is breaking from its normal practice of releasing the full research to the public in order to allow more time to discuss the ramifications of the technological breakthrough.
Humanity has less than a decade to survive.Or the AI will start to take over the world with it deep fake news articles that have the humans fighting wars with each over what it reports to the public.
what human imagination.... its gone.
technology wiped it out.
There's the fast-track method. Robo-writer, hu-man editor.As with a lot of machine-learning applications, I suspect that this one would be best served as the basis for a centaur, with the model churning out tons of poetry and a human acting as a discerner to throw away the garbage and pluck out the happy accidents.
Well if bots can't write the stories themselves they sure seem keen to contribute to the story ideas forum.
http://forum.literotica.com/showthread.php?t=1466752
Imagination? Nah. Mars, here we come.....
Besides, if you doubt imagination continues to exist just watch CNN.... BWWAAAHAHAHAAAAA
What will AIwriter do when it first gets a one-bomb, that's what I want to know. Will it be able to compute incomprehensible human behaviour, or spin around in circles until it disappears up its own silicon chip?If AI starts writing that well, I think that readers will start looking for those things that make stories uniquely human. Nothing is valuable in mass quantities. If it started raining diamonds, people would get tired of having to rake them off their lawns.