TheExperimentalist
Inventive
- Joined
- Dec 1, 2024
- Posts
- 144
So I view it as being three tiers (maybe more that I'm not even thinking of yet) of ways in which AI is affecting art.
1.
The most basic, obviously, is people making AI slop or having AI 'fix up' creations that are possibly even halfway decent, rather than improving their own skills.
2.
False assumption of AI involvement. This tier, aside from including the most obvious thing affecting this community, includes the reality that, in the past, if I saw a picture of video of something really cool and unbelievable on social media, my first thought was 'wow, how did they do that? I want to learn more!' Now, my first thought, even when it's actually something real, is 'it's probably just AI'. Half the time, I don't even look to vet or learn about it the way I used to, and I'm sure that, as a result, I end up missing out on some wondrous things about the world in which we live. I suspect that many others check even less than I do now and just always assume AI.
Included in this tier is also the hopeless feeling on the part of creatives who give up creating after asking themselves 'why should I even bother when people will just bury my creations in mountains of AI slop?' I will admit to struggling with this question a lot myself lately.
3.
This is the tier I specifically want to talk about. It pertains to stories more than anything else, but it's about the ways in which plotlines and character motivations are affected by the realities of the AI age. I've only been writing naughty fiction for about a year, yet in that time, roughly half of my WIPs set in 'modern' day (I have twenty or so in a modern setting, so about ten) will need some major tweaking to either explain character motivations or explicitly set them in a year prior to 2025.
I'm talking about the little changes that AI has, in such a short time, caused to ways in which we operate or view things. Stuff like 'why does this character believe they're chatting with a real person?' or 'why aren't they assuming that picture is just AI?' or 'they could accomplish that task they're stuck on in about five seconds.' And while that last one COULD be solved by setting up a character as AI-refusing, making sure a reader knows that without affecting pacing, when it's not a main plot point, would be difficult if not impossible. It would also be unrealistic for EVERY character to refuse to participate in the majority trends of the modern world, much as I myself may hate them.
A WIP I recently started has this moment near the beginning where the first-person character is longing for the slower days of their youth, and reflects on the changes in the world:
I wrote it in large part as a way to explore my own feelings on the matter, but I can't write every story like that. Thus, I'm left feeling a little stuck in a world I wish hadn't taken the turn that it has.
Has anyone noticed any other ways AI is affecting plotlines and assumptions, and if so, what do you do about it?
1.
The most basic, obviously, is people making AI slop or having AI 'fix up' creations that are possibly even halfway decent, rather than improving their own skills.
2.
False assumption of AI involvement. This tier, aside from including the most obvious thing affecting this community, includes the reality that, in the past, if I saw a picture of video of something really cool and unbelievable on social media, my first thought was 'wow, how did they do that? I want to learn more!' Now, my first thought, even when it's actually something real, is 'it's probably just AI'. Half the time, I don't even look to vet or learn about it the way I used to, and I'm sure that, as a result, I end up missing out on some wondrous things about the world in which we live. I suspect that many others check even less than I do now and just always assume AI.
Included in this tier is also the hopeless feeling on the part of creatives who give up creating after asking themselves 'why should I even bother when people will just bury my creations in mountains of AI slop?' I will admit to struggling with this question a lot myself lately.
3.
This is the tier I specifically want to talk about. It pertains to stories more than anything else, but it's about the ways in which plotlines and character motivations are affected by the realities of the AI age. I've only been writing naughty fiction for about a year, yet in that time, roughly half of my WIPs set in 'modern' day (I have twenty or so in a modern setting, so about ten) will need some major tweaking to either explain character motivations or explicitly set them in a year prior to 2025.
I'm talking about the little changes that AI has, in such a short time, caused to ways in which we operate or view things. Stuff like 'why does this character believe they're chatting with a real person?' or 'why aren't they assuming that picture is just AI?' or 'they could accomplish that task they're stuck on in about five seconds.' And while that last one COULD be solved by setting up a character as AI-refusing, making sure a reader knows that without affecting pacing, when it's not a main plot point, would be difficult if not impossible. It would also be unrealistic for EVERY character to refuse to participate in the majority trends of the modern world, much as I myself may hate them.
A WIP I recently started has this moment near the beginning where the first-person character is longing for the slower days of their youth, and reflects on the changes in the world:
The internet had been in its infancy at the same time I was. The World Wide Web and I grew up side by side. We had to listen to thirty seconds of screeching if we wanted to connect to anyone or anything outside our physical possession, and hope no one picked up the phone if we wanted to maintain that connection.
How had we gotten from there to a world where everyone was agitated by even the slightest delay, where creativity and quality were routinely curtailed in the name of 'efficiency'? It had been getting bad for years, I reflected, but now with the onset of the 'AI Age', I had truly begun to feel alien in my own world.
What bothered me even more was the peer pressure. Within the space of a single year, all of my friends and coworkers had gone from talking about how unreliable AI was to urging me to 'try it' and waxing poetic about how much it's helping them accomplish. I didn't understand it. Was it some kind of mass delusion? Mind control? Was I the last sane human being left on the planet?
Oh, I knew (thanks to the selfsame internet) that there were pockets of people who, like me, had declined to sell their soul to unfeeling technology in the name of efficiency, but it seemed that most of the world had made their deal with the devil.
Of course, it was merely the most recent in a series of events that felt like it had stripped away everything I cared about.
I wrote it in large part as a way to explore my own feelings on the matter, but I can't write every story like that. Thus, I'm left feeling a little stuck in a world I wish hadn't taken the turn that it has.
Has anyone noticed any other ways AI is affecting plotlines and assumptions, and if so, what do you do about it?