Kelliezgirl
Debauched Dilettante
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2023
- Posts
- 2,051
Clearly you don't know about the use of dwarven bread as a weapon."Pastry"?!
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Clearly you don't know about the use of dwarven bread as a weapon."Pastry"?!
My point is that few students will put time and effort into doing work and solving some problem if the solution and all the work are already available online or by making a query to the AI. It is not how they function. So if everything is available easily, how exactly can we teach them to think? How can we force them to apply their wits when all the answers lie one click away?
I know we can't really fight the progress of AI but we should start working on guidelines on how to prevent students from becoming lazy copy-paste drones. Right now, I believe no one has any clue how to do that.
I am also very skeptical about people or tools being able to spot AI-generated content in the future. AI can be taught to use slang, to insert a grammatical error or two, and to apply other methods to fake a human author. This problem needs some proper approach and prompt reaction, yet we are already behind in developing strategies and guidelines.
Others in this thread have proved that there are workarounds for explicit content. Perhaps the "eggplant" example upthread isn't the best, but that would just mean doing a Find & Replace.AI allegations are complete nonsense. The AIs I'm currently working with (mainly Bard) strictly avoid slurs, violence, and anything remotely explicit, making the notion of using them for writing porn absurd.
I'm confused. You say AI can't produce anything sophisticated, but also that it can make human writing more sophisticated. Genuinely interested, because I've only ever been on the receiving end of AI-supported translation, so I don't really know what the capabilities are beyond, as you say, very unsophisticated text generation.In terms of storytelling, these machines currently produce narratives at a middle-school level at best (still surpassing much of the sewage circulating the top lists). So, why would anyone contemplate using them for story generation?
Their true usage lies not in crafting original text but in refining it. With the judicious assistance of AI, grammar, syntax, wording, and pace can be significantly enhanced while preserving one's unique tone and style. Though it entails some trial and error with prompts, mastering the process is achievable. It doesn't necessarily save time, but the end result is undeniably worthwhile.
Others in this thread have proved that there are workarounds for explicit content. Perhaps the "eggplant" example upthread isn't the best, but that would just mean doing a Find & Replace.
I still think some of this "progress" is turning the world to shit. As a gear head there is a difference between a manual trans and a slushbox, a car isn't just an appliance to me.this isn't new. Books on writing were deprecated by blog posts on writing; the information is the same within one or two degrees of freedom for modernization, it's simply the mechanism of delivery that has changed. You still need to be able to read it (or listen to it if it's narrated) in order to apply it.
A car is a mechanical contraption that (for most people) is purchased as a (one could say mandatory) method of saving time. The difference between a manual and automatic transmission makes zero difference to the primary function of a car - that is, getting you from A to B in less than a day. (I grew up driving manual cars, I owned an audi S3, and I currently drive a computerised starship because it's convenient.) Manual cars are becoming an anachronism - like piston-engined aircraft, there will always be some around, but the dominant paradigm has moved on.
School's ultimate function is to teach you to think. Leaving aside the argument as to whether that's what it actually accomplishes, when you come out of school you are supposed to possess a baseline ability in mathematics and language and some exposure to art, science, geography and history - enough to be aware that the subjects exist, which for a subset of people is often enough to nudge them on the correct path. Some people never achieve that, and for some people that's simply not something they see as important. The presence or absence of online schoolwork makes no difference to these people bar permitting them a slightly easier path through a mandated set of hoops.
At a fundamental level, I believe, AI systems don't replace people. They change the power structures and accessibility structures for some forms of creative or deductive work, and the jury is out on whether that's a beneficial thing or not. There may be some roles where AI can replace significant parts of a person's job, but IMO a smart person will leverage that in new and creative ways - say what you want, but we're a very creative species.
A big one in my industry is AI-generated code for algorithms or system integrations. It's very cool to be able to ask an AI assistant "hey, write me some code that integrates with this system" and get a wodge of three hundred lines that I didn't have to write. Except that, now, as an experienced engineer, the very first thing I do is vet it. An AI can use formal proofs to prove that a set of code is safe, but it has NO FUCKING IDEA about the rest of the system that the code will be used in - for that you need a human mind... for now
My personal opinion is that there will be an entirely new industry spawned - people who are very good at spotting AI-generated content and flagging it.
At this point the genie is out of the bottle, and the best we can do is adapt.
oh. Shit. I was ranting again.
Let's not call it that, thanks.you mean witch hunters?
Well, so much for a reasonable discussion then...Don't buy into any BS people try to sell you. Stories written years ago are being removed without any valid explanation. It seems like a form of torture, and anyone who supports it is likely a sociopath. Unfortunately, there's no shortage of those among porn writers and consumers.
It’s Tilan back again with a new account. Put him on ignore and continue on with your day.Well, so much for a reasonable discussion then...
It doesn't necessarily save time, but the end result is undeniably worthwhile.
But that usage is exactly the kind of thing Laurel has described as not permitted. From what she's said she doesn't want to allow any AI assistance beyond spell checking and simple grammar compliance.Their true usage lies not in crafting original text but in refining it. With the judicious assistance of AI, grammar, syntax, wording, and pace can be significantly enhanced while preserving one's unique tone and style. Though it entails some trial and error with prompts, mastering the process is achievable. It doesn't necessarily save time, but the end result is undeniably worthwhile.
I’ll say this: I use ProWritingAid, and while I actually use very few of its suggestions (outside of obvious spelling or punctuation ones), it does force me to think harder about how I put my sentences and therefore paragraphs together. It makes me slow down when I’m revising and think “do I really want to use passive voice here?” or “I’ve used that same word a lot” or “maybe that is too long a sentence, and I should break it up.”If it doesn't save time, what's worthwhile about it?
I'm trying to understand your position once the rhetoric is stripped away, so be specific. What can a typical Lit writer, who enjoys writing and has found reasonable success here, find "worthwhile" in using AI? Because I admit, I don't get it.
SMDLAU doesn't seem like someone who cares about guidelines, especially with those initials.
They're using unreliable AI to detect AI; this is ridiculous, a witch hunt.
Following their logic, should I stop producing music with Ableton just because some people still prefer to jam? Should I throw away my old synthesizers? Should we discard our computers and smartphones and go back to using quills?
There's only good art or bad art. In the AI era, either adapt or step aside.
But this is exactly the kind of thing Laurel is trying to prohibit. Grammar and spelling are one thing; this is rewriting. There's no way to reliably identify someone doing what you show here, but this extent of rewriting seems like breaking the rule against AI writing to me.This is the revised version with artificial assistance:
And this is the original paragraph:
The changes are mild but undoubtedly worthwhile.
The original, to my eye, is better. The AI version is over-written - as the expression goes, "purple prose." I'd ignore the AI input, in this small example, and go with the original.This is the revised version with artificial assistance:
And this is the original paragraph:
The changes are mild but undoubtedly worthwhile.
My approach is irrelevant, I don't care particularly. But my understanding of Laurel's approach, from the messages from her that people facing rejections have shared here on the forum, is that this is the kind of thing she is trying to filter out and reject.Your approach is overly strict. This isn't for a complete rewrite but an enhancement of existing text, a process that involves multiple attempts, with the final adjustments being my own. The guidelines explicitly prohibit the generation of content by AI and emphasize the importance of originality. However, I believe that refining an existing text is legitimate.
I'd change 'tired worm' to 'weary pilgrim' and leave it at that.The original, to my eye, is better. The AI version is over-written - as the expression goes, "purple prose." I'd ignore the AI input, in this small example, and go with the original.
The intention is clear, but the implementation has failed.
I appreciate your opinion, and I'll consider it. However, you're not available 24/7 like my private assistant AI.
I wouldn't assume any of them are lying. But you have said that you used AI assistance for the passage you shared, and that was the only passage I was talking about. It seems like you aren't understanding what I'm saying, so I'll back up a little. I have been saying in several threads that AI detectors don't work reliably, and that it's fucked up so many people are having their work pulled for AI. Some of them have shared communication they got from Laurel as we have all been trying to figure out what's causing all the rejections and how to solve it. One of those communications was asking the author if they used grammarly and saying spell check and grammar fixes are okay but not AI rewriting that it can do. Now you are here talking about using AI rewriting, and I am here warning you that that's what Laurel is looking for to reject.The intention is clear, but the implementation has failed. Many writers, including some well-established ones, claim they were wronged and insist they didn't use AI. Are they all lying?
https://literotica.com/faq/publishing/publishing-ai has recently been updated and confirms the "spelling/grammar OK, rewriting bad" position:I wouldn't assume any of them are lying. But you have said that you used AI assistance for the passage you shared, and that was the only passage I was talking about. It seems like you aren't understanding what I'm saying, so I'll back up a little. I have been saying in several threads that AI detectors don't work reliably, and that it's fucked up so many people are having their work pulled for AI. Some of them have shared communication they got from Laurel as we have all been trying to figure out what's causing all the rejections and how to solve it. One of those communications was asking the author if they used grammarly and saying spell check and grammar fixes are okay but not AI rewriting that it can do. Now you are here talking about using AI rewriting, and I am here warning you that that's what Laurel is looking for to reject.
You say rewriting, and I say refining. In any case, if I ever choose to post here, I highly doubt it will be flagged.
I think your second "I rewrote it" go, pushes it towards the AI example - see also Bramble's post below.Good advise. How about this:
And yet, why is human input considered legitimate while AI is not? These are my original, vivid images, and I'll employ any means to enhance them.