What If Readers Like A.I.-Generated Fiction?

(newyorker.com)

9 points | by tkgally a day ago ago

10 comments

  • tim333 12 hours ago ago

    >I can sell the book only if readers like it more than what they can get from, say, a chatbot.

    I think people are biased pro human if they know there's an AI involved.

  • N_Lens a day ago ago

    Then they'll drown in it until they grow tired of it.

  • nephihaha a day ago ago

    It's the same process as music and film. If you keep on producing mass slop, don't surprised when people can't tell the difference between it and AI.

    Much of pop music nowadays is so heavily autotuned and processed now that it is moving more towards AI music, not vice versa.

    • 12 hours ago ago
      [deleted]
    • bigbadfeline 12 hours ago ago

      > It's the same process as music and film. If you keep on producing mass slop, don't surprised when people can't tell the difference between it and AI.

      That's not a surprise, given that AI is trained on mass slop. In other words, garbage in - garbage out.

      Enshitification has been with us for a lot longer than AI and despite the promises to the contrary, AI ain't fixing it without people changing it first.

  • geldedus 15 hours ago ago

    Oh, no! That would smash AI-haters narratives!

  • nephihaha a day ago ago

    Paywalled.

    • tim333 12 hours ago ago
    • CamperBob2 20 hours ago ago

      That's the crux of the matter, I suppose. How do you paywall a local model that generates art and fiction on par with the commercial mass market?

      You can RTFA by hitting F9 in Firefox to bring up Reader mode. I think that's worthwhile, as it's not a bad article. But it's one we've seen before and will see again: "My previous judgement that AI was incapable of X, Y, and Z was based on last year's model, and now I can no longer back up that opinion. This is <great | terrible>."