I don't care. If anything in what you posted as your story was not written/plotted/developed by you, there needs to be credit.Problem is, that everyone's amount of usage would likely be different.
I don't care. If anything in what you posted as your story was not written/plotted/developed by you, there needs to be credit.Problem is, that everyone's amount of usage would likely be different.
I didn't say I am a ghostwriter but rather that I have written professionally as a ghostwriter. I didn't say how often or for how long. (The answer is one brief job a few years ago, but you said "never," so...)
So, he's not a full-time translator. Gotcha.Some do; see citations above. Also refer to my comment about a friend of mine who worked as a translator for over a decade. He thinks AI will end his translation career but thinks AI translation has immense utility. He does other work now and always has.
There's still a great deal of legal debate, and it is far from established law. That's why all those people were submitting opinions in the first place. And I am pretty sure the AG lawsuit will not fail.What "REAL" authors think is frankly entirely irrelevant, because AI is indeed transformative fair use according to established law and so the Authors Guild lawsuit is likely to fail.
I feel bad for the people who get caught up in this. But that is the great thing about being human, you can chase other goals and desires if where you are at no longer satisfies either your personal or professional goals.
Should you credit your grammar book, your spell check program, Purdue Owl for creating your work cited page or table of context or index?I don't care. If anything in what you posted as your story was not written/plotted/developed by you, there needs to be credit.
The problem people are having here is in the idea that someone else may be benefiting from a creation they didn't put the same work into a everyone else.
-Will
1) We're not talking about the inevitable changing of technology that humanity has dealt with throughout history. We're talking about basically eliminating creativity itself.
But we’re not. Creativity in humans will still exist. We’re talking about new avenues of creativity for those that chose to use it.
My problem with it is the way studios are already trying to use it to put writers out of work. Why do you think AI was such a sticking point in the strikes last year?
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These workers are out of a job too. Their strikes have not been heeded, and automobiles, as well as other goods and services done by computers are keeping prices down.
I'm not saying that's a good thing. I actually think lower prices aren't necessarily better. Economically, it isn't viable to reduce the work force. It will just cause inflation and greater economic disparity. However, the economy will always seek to level out, even as the pursuit of profits continues to attempt to tilt the scales. However, in the overall picture, a few out of work writers probably won't have the impact of all those out of work factory workers.
-Will
I struggle with writing some things, but want to be able to include them.AI Writing? Yes.
Or some could simply be people who struggle with writing but want to be creative...
It takes both. I've read hundreds of Star Trek novels and hundreds more Star Trek fanfic stories.I took classes for a Masters in Education. One of the hot subjects that came up was, how do we teach good writing? Most of the class suggested having students write more as the path to good writing. I was the one person that said, no, good writing is not achieved by writing more bad writing. Good writing is achieved by studying examples of great writing. Read.
Franklin W. Dixon is a house name that is/was (dunno if that series is still going) used by whoever was hired to write the books. There was a house style that had to be adhered to, and elements that had to be present in every book. That's how it is in series of this type, whether it's Hardy Boys, Nancy Drew, or any other juvenile mystery or science fiction series (I have most of the Tom Swift Jr. novels, for instance). Sometimes it works well, and sometimes... well, let's just say that sometimes carelessness creeps in. The discontinuities and retcons in the Trixie Belden series is actually pretty hilarious at times, with the kids changing ages in reverse in the same novel, or changing eye colors or even names from book to book.Our own creativity is in the story itself, in the way we put our words together, in those small details and big ideas that didn't come from some other creator. This is what AI writing does. Maybe some author doesn't write the words, but they are the Edward Stratemeyer of the stories created. (In case you don't know who Edward Stratemeyer was, he was the creator of the Hardy Boys. The series of books were written by ghost writers).
Exactly. Writers (real ones) put a bit of their own lived experiences into their work, even if it's just a casual thing like basing a character on a RL school friend or coworker, or the meal that the protagonist ate on a meal the author remembers.I personally am not against AI, I just would want it to be heavily regulated for creative use.
Not necessarily because of immorality (and i agree with you that the line between plagiarism and inspiration is a thin one), but purely because in a world where art is so intrinsically connected with experiencing life why would you want art from something that’s just… reusing?
I think AI can be an incredible instrument (when utilised appropriately), but not the composer.
Now we are getting into Butlerian Jihad territory, and whether you prefer the BH/KJA crap or the version in the Dune Encyclopedia that predates BH/KJA by 15 years or so and has Frank Herbert's approval, it's still not a future I'd want.You get the picture. What if AI actually was given motivation? I mean, its own reason for acting. AI is just a human tool until it begins to make decisions for its own reasons outside of human desires. Now we are talking a good scifi plot.
Fanfiction didn't just spring into existence when the internet started. It's been around for a very long time. Science fiction itself as a branch of literature is approaching the century mark, if it hasn't already come, and of course people back then were just as apt as people are now to try their hand at writing, based on something they read and liked.But what if the AI develops a plot about an AI plotting to take over fan-fiction by developing all the plots?
(And how do you know I didn't use AI to develop that plot?)
rbs
Okay, here's what I think about it, then.Eh, what? This is specifically about how the people who frequent this subforum feel about allowing or disallowing AI generated contributions. It’s not about whether AI generated fan fiction can be stopped or not. It’s about finding a consensus as to what is the agreed upon standard for posting creative works here. It’s about establishing a norm or sort of moral code of what goes and what doesn’t. Sure, the question that follows might be about how to go about bringing forth this standard, and the difficulty this might present. But that’s not what I understood this to be about.
Frank Herbert considered suing Lucas for plagiarism.Copyrighted works can legally be used without the rightsholders' permission or knowledge—or even in spite of their vehement disapproval—in any way that meets the legal definition of fair use. Studying them is one such legal use. It's legal when humans do it and it's legal when AI does it, too. George Lucas didn't violate any copyrights when he viewed and read copyrighted works such as Flash Gordon, John Carter of Mars, Dune, and Triumph of the Will and incorporated various elements of them into new creations, and AI doesn't violate any copyrights when it studies existing works and incorporates elements of them into new creations, either.
Heh, I wonder what it would make if fed books that use a unique grammatical style or dialogue style because the author chose to do something nonstandard?Bingo. AI has no idea about grammar or the structure of language. It doesn't understand anything outside of the positive reinforcement it gets from randomly stringing words together correctly. Midjourney doesn't understand the form of the dog, it just understands pixels in a certain order probably mean dog.
The thing is, an AI doesn't need to worry about rent, food, utilities, or any of the dozens of other things real artists have to worry about.AI isn’t going to stop people from picking up pencil and paper, or musical instruments. Those have been with us since the dawn of mankind.
It will create a more competitive environment for those who wish to do it as a living. I’m not sure that is a bad thing.
I still trust my own editing abilities over an AI editor.I just realized that I don't recall any outrage over Grammarly and other automated editors unfairly inconveniencing human editors...
Literacy was a thing 5500 years ago. And a million years isn't much on evolutionary scales.A million years? We've only been out of the prehistoric age for about 5500 years. That's so long from now that we might not even be talking about homosapian.
Better hope the machines don't break down and we still remember how to do the work ourselves.Even without changing human nature, I'd still prefer a world in which at least all labor necessary for survival is handled by machines.
What "new avenues"? If a painter gets pushed out of the market by an AI, should the human painter take up knitting?But we’re not. Creativity in humans will still exist. We’re talking about new avenues of creativity for those that chose to use it.
AI isn’t going to stop people from picking up pencil and paper, or musical instruments. Those have been with us since the dawn of mankind.
It will create a more competitive environment for those who wish to do it as a living. I’m not sure that is a bad thing.
Trying to destroy group X has been the battle cry against every new invention since the dawn of the industrial revolution.
Trying to destroy group X has been the battle cry against every new invention since the dawn of the industrial revolution.
At the end of the day, if AI is commercially viable, it is another competitor in the space.
If you don’t want AI learning from your work, keep the work off of the internet.
So Amazon has its own version of the bot-narrated YouTube videos now?Amazon put up an AI generated audiobook system in hopes of driving audiobook narrators out of business.
So Amazon has its own version of the bot-narrated YouTube videos now?
Just a couple of days ago I listened to a few minutes of a Dune video, and it was painfully obvious that a human wasn't narrating it. Yet the comments section had people raving about what a wonderful "analysis" it was of the movie (with mispronounced words and names, stiff language, obvious errors in some details).
It's getting so the search engines are choking on AI-generated crap.
And all I need to do to get my own comments infested is highlight a sentence. Up pops a "helpful" offer from Copilot to rewrite it.
If I want to revise my comments, I'll do it myself.
It's a very winnable fight and the Screen Writers Guild have shown it has to be fought and have already won big on it.
At the end of the day, if AI is commercially viable, it is another competitor in the space.
If you don’t want AI learning from your work, keep the work off of the internet.
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