englishnospeak
Virgin
- Joined
- Nov 28, 2018
- Posts
- 28
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It's not astonishing if you have a sufficiently cynical opinion about non-artificial (human) intelligence.The fact that people haven't realised that none of these 'AI' chatbots do what they claim to do at this point is astonishing
The issue is more pronounced with fiction than non-fiction. On some sites, I can recognize what I think is AI-generated text. It tends to be too long for the subject matter and sounds somewhat generic. However, if I had never heard of AI, I would just think it was dull writing but by a human. AI-generated photos are usually easily spotted because they are obviously a mash-up of different images.It's not astonishing if you have a sufficiently cynical opinion about non-artificial (human) intelligence.
Garbage in, garbage out, as they say.
Given that OpenAI recently said they're spending $2 for every $1 they earn, and that trend appears to be repeated across the industry, I think the bottom will have dropped out of this thing long before then. The VCs will cash out, all of these 'AI' services will collapse, and all we'll have to show for it will be a dead internet and a class of creatives no longer able to financially support themselves because the value of their labour has been devalued.Yet AI on-line has developed from non-existent a few years ago to a point beyond which I thought would be possible. (Sort of like how those self-driving taxis by Waymo are getting better and better.) I wonder where we'll be ten years from now.
Please please pleaseGiven that OpenAI recently said they're spending $2 for every $1 they earn, and that trend appears to be repeated across the industry, I think the bottom will have dropped out of this thing long before then. The VCs will cash out, all of these 'AI' services will collapse, and all we'll have to show for it will be a dead internet and a class of creatives no longer able to financially support themselves because the value of their labour has been devalued.
I've noticed it most prominently on estate agent listings for houses for sale. They seem to feed in details and get the AI to write the listing, but they don't check for errors. So it ends up being too long (they think more words are better); it sounds completely generic; and there are minor problems that it feels like a human wouldn't make.The issue is more pronounced with fiction than non-fiction. On some sites, I can recognize what I think is AI-generated text. It tends to be too long for the subject matter and sounds somewhat generic. However, if I had never heard of AI, I would just think it was dull writing but by a human.
I would argue that human-made art will increase in value, instead.Given that OpenAI recently said they're spending $2 for every $1 they earn, and that trend appears to be repeated across the industry, I think the bottom will have dropped out of this thing long before then. The VCs will cash out, all of these 'AI' services will collapse, and all we'll have to show for it will be a dead internet and a class of creatives no longer able to financially support themselves because the value of their labour has been devalued.
All things human will eventually increase in value, including face to face interaction.I would argue that human-made art will increase in value, instead.
Given that OpenAI recently said they're spending $2 for every $1 they earn, and that trend appears to be repeated across the industry, I think the bottom will have dropped out of this thing long before then. The VCs will cash out, all of these 'AI' services will collapse, and all we'll have to show for it will be a dead internet and a class of creatives no longer able to financially support themselves because the value of their labour has been devalued.
Real estate listings are one place where it might take hold. The buyers and sellers of real estate probably don't care if it sounds generic. The length is an issue, but I'd guess that is something that can be tweaked in the programming.I've noticed it most prominently on estate agent listings for houses for sale. They seem to feed in details and get the AI to write the listing, but they don't check for errors. So it ends up being too long (they think more words are better); it sounds completely generic; and there are minor problems that it feels like a human wouldn't make.
Do you mean human creativity, or anything that humans have a hand in making? It seems that some things do fall in value and are not coming back soon (unless the government subsidizes something, like passenger trains). Face to face interaction: still seems to be falling in "value," however that is measured. There is a huge quantity of interactions that can now be done with a smartphone. And arguably Amazon and such are hitting normal retail operations hard. (Macy's is closing about 150 stores in the next two years.)All things human will eventually increase in value, including face to face interaction.
Do you mean human creativity, or anything that humans have a hand in making? It seems that some things do fall in value and are not coming back soon (unless the government subsidizes something, like passenger trains). Face to face interaction: still seems to be falling in "value," however that is measured. There is a huge quantity of interactions that can now be done with a smartphone. And arguably Amazon and such are hitting normal retail operations hard. (Macy's is closing about 150 stores in the next two years.)
Overall, one thing that isn't worth much is predictions.
Well, this is only the 15th post on this thread. Most of the other threads have been writers complaining about AI rejections and how to avoid them. Yet on a couple of other sites of this type, the issue doesn't seem to come up very often. Why only on Lit? The management here seems to have become - concerned? panicked? - and the fear is now reflected back by us.I predict we shan't see the end of the AI discussion in the near future!
Well, this is only the 15th post on this thread. Most of the other threads have been writers complaining about AI rejections and how to avoid them. Yet on a couple of other sites of this type, the issue doesn't seem to come up very often. Why only on Lit? The management here seems to have become - concerned? panicked? - and the fear is now reflected back by us.
I'm going to be seventy next month, so I don't think I care. I'm trying to understand this:They're coming to get you @gunhilltrain.
The Director's Cut.Since I've been through all of that time, now what?
I would argue that human-made art will increase in value, instead.
The main thought anyone has when seeing something was generated by AI is cheap and vapid. Because AI is all about mashing up averages, no creative risks. Unless the tech bros figure out how to make AI understand what it learns, it'll only get duller and duller.
This can be useful in certain domains, but not in creative ones, and especially not in fiction.
There have already been quite a few scandals with publishing companies opting for AI cover art and both readers and authors being very unhappy about it, to the point where the offending books had to be pulled from the market.
What is likely to happen, is that publishing companies will suffer, if they don't keep clean of AI, and indie publishing will get more attention. Also, publishers will have to be brave. AI can write for broad audiences, hit all the genre standards that are pushed right now to make as many readers happy as possible... and people will start associating broad audience writing with AI, which they increasingly see as cheap and boring, which will lead to less sales.
I'd say hold on for maybe a year more, until the novelty becomes mundane and the bubble pops... it's already deflating...
[edit on topic]
These AI identifier engines are quite unreliable. I'm studying in IT and our professors seem to have given up on these engines entirely and reverted to the good old plagiarism checker. When we asked about referencing GPT they raised their shoulders at us and basically said 'make a pdf with the conversation and annex it, if you must'
I recall some companies filtering their job applicants based on some words like 'passionate' in their cv/letter, but somebody must've realized how dumb that is, considering how they expect a certain decorum in those texts, so 'hey, bro, just give me that job, thanks' won't do either.
That is the winning question, isn't it?What does it actually mean to āunderstandā something?
Lift with the knees when you carry their water, Alex. Wouldn't want to throw out your back.
Also, just this week I learned that Pandora had a jar, not a box. Pandora's Box is the name of the jail on the Pandora, a British naval vessel sent to hunt down the mutineers from the Bounty.
It would be its, not it's, but I meant the people who benefit from AI.If youāre referring to AI shouldnāt you say āitās waterā?
But no. Iām not carrying its water. Iām watching it carry water for a variety of users, for a variety of purposes.
I have many concerns over the impact it has had and the ones to come. My number one fear is that people will underestimate it and society will suffer unforeseen consequences.
What it technically is and how it works is of less importance to society than what it does and what it is used for.
Something Iām looking for is a practical sort of Turing Test that I can use when dealing with one while on chat, tech support, or customer service. Have you been initially fooled by an AI while on the phone?
I was on a long tech support call recently, thinking I was dealing with two humans. I thought one was the regular tech and the other was a higher level engineer. Nope. It was the regular guy and his AI assistant. Iād been directly asking it questions for a while before I realized the human tech was restating some of my questions and was redirecting some of the responses. The company is actively training the AI to autonomously answer their tech service calls.
It was me recognizing how the human tech was crafting prompts that clued me in.