RejectReality
Errant Smut Slinger
- Joined
- Jan 1, 2009
- Posts
- 5,135
The silence is simple to answer. No matter what they say, 75% of the people complaining about any issue will call the answer bullshit and then spend another month generating ever-wilder conspiracy theories. This was proven to them often enough years ago that they rarely try anymore except to message individuals who seem more or less rational on the particular subject, once in a blue moon. Otherwise, if it's a problem that needs solving, they just do it quietly in the background. If it's just something people don't like... *shrug* Explaining why it is the way it is just generate endless "yeah, but".
I believe the current AI "solution" is a farce that's obviously driving authors away. I've personally fielded at least a dozen PMs inquiring about other places to go myself. That being said, it's patently obvious the queue is overloaded. The number of stories being published has exploded since I started years ago. It was rare air for a story to end up on page 2 of the new story list for many, many years. People would scream bloody murder if the contest stories pushed them onto page 2. Now they're dropping sometimes hundreds of new submissions per day. It wasn't very long ago at all ( maybe last year ) that I had a discussion with Laurel, and she said she was still doing the work herself after all these years. 8+ hours a day working the queue. That doesn't count the bug reports, sweep requests, forum reports, yadda, yadda, yadda. There's nothing automated in the queue beyond whatever they're doing about AI. If they're determined to stick with this AI filtering thing, that's what I would automate. Create that whimsical whitelist everyone keeps talking about for real, and just automatically reject anything above a certain percentage generated by the hallucinating clanker. Just watch the complaints about long wait times vanish if they do that, and the screeches about false AI rejections explode again. At least it would take some of the load off Laurel in the process. There's no winning here, so may as well get something useful out of it.
All this whining and moaning ( including my own about the AI detector ) accomplishes exactly jack shit. Taking your ball and going somewhere else means nothing. The #1 author has done that more than once, and it had exactly zero effect in the grand scheme of things. Huge swaths of people left during the political hell the place had become several years ago, which represented a decent number of top 100 authors. Fart in a whirlwind. All it does is push the two people who've been holding this place up on their shoulders for 25 years now — and have to be in some stage of burnout — toward Lit's inevitable end.
If there was someone they trusted enough to take the place over, they'd already be on board helping and learning the ropes. That means the place will either slowly fade away when they stop accepting new content until the server contracts run out, vanish abruptly because they just can't take it anymore, or get sold off to some porn conglomerate that want it for the content and the traffic it can drive to the sites they care about. If it was me, listening to the ingrates playing martyr around here year after year after year, I'd sell it off just to come back every once in a while to giggle at folks learning what having the people in charge actually not give a shit looks like.
Oh, and the "buggy changes that nobody asked for" to the activity feed? Dime to a donut, shunting stuff off to an archive was a necessity, not a feature. The system we had was put in place before lists took off ( and that's only going to ramp up as more people discover them. Trust me ) and the volume of data that was blasting through it had to be causing issues behind the scenes. Database restructuring with a goal is why that change was made. I can pretty much guarantee that once the bugs are ironed out of what they've put up now, the archive items will expire and get dumped after a certain amount of time. That's the logical reason for making that change.
I believe the current AI "solution" is a farce that's obviously driving authors away. I've personally fielded at least a dozen PMs inquiring about other places to go myself. That being said, it's patently obvious the queue is overloaded. The number of stories being published has exploded since I started years ago. It was rare air for a story to end up on page 2 of the new story list for many, many years. People would scream bloody murder if the contest stories pushed them onto page 2. Now they're dropping sometimes hundreds of new submissions per day. It wasn't very long ago at all ( maybe last year ) that I had a discussion with Laurel, and she said she was still doing the work herself after all these years. 8+ hours a day working the queue. That doesn't count the bug reports, sweep requests, forum reports, yadda, yadda, yadda. There's nothing automated in the queue beyond whatever they're doing about AI. If they're determined to stick with this AI filtering thing, that's what I would automate. Create that whimsical whitelist everyone keeps talking about for real, and just automatically reject anything above a certain percentage generated by the hallucinating clanker. Just watch the complaints about long wait times vanish if they do that, and the screeches about false AI rejections explode again. At least it would take some of the load off Laurel in the process. There's no winning here, so may as well get something useful out of it.
All this whining and moaning ( including my own about the AI detector ) accomplishes exactly jack shit. Taking your ball and going somewhere else means nothing. The #1 author has done that more than once, and it had exactly zero effect in the grand scheme of things. Huge swaths of people left during the political hell the place had become several years ago, which represented a decent number of top 100 authors. Fart in a whirlwind. All it does is push the two people who've been holding this place up on their shoulders for 25 years now — and have to be in some stage of burnout — toward Lit's inevitable end.
If there was someone they trusted enough to take the place over, they'd already be on board helping and learning the ropes. That means the place will either slowly fade away when they stop accepting new content until the server contracts run out, vanish abruptly because they just can't take it anymore, or get sold off to some porn conglomerate that want it for the content and the traffic it can drive to the sites they care about. If it was me, listening to the ingrates playing martyr around here year after year after year, I'd sell it off just to come back every once in a while to giggle at folks learning what having the people in charge actually not give a shit looks like.
Oh, and the "buggy changes that nobody asked for" to the activity feed? Dime to a donut, shunting stuff off to an archive was a necessity, not a feature. The system we had was put in place before lists took off ( and that's only going to ramp up as more people discover them. Trust me ) and the volume of data that was blasting through it had to be causing issues behind the scenes. Database restructuring with a goal is why that change was made. I can pretty much guarantee that once the bugs are ironed out of what they've put up now, the archive items will expire and get dumped after a certain amount of time. That's the logical reason for making that change.