Since the rise of "social media" driven by clicks on ads, quality has almost entirely been replaced by quantity. And now, creativity has been farmed out as well.
I still believe in quality.
George Monbiot said it years ago.
Advertising is a poison that demeans even love – and we're hooked on it.
"Sleepwalking" is a poor metaphor here, and "sleep" appears nowhere else in the article. Vs. "head-in-the-sand" - introduced two dozen paragraphs later - is a far better fit for the situation.
It'd be more interesting if the article talked about the situations which literary editors and award committees would face, if they tried to reject submissions for (seemingly) being AI-generated.
Perhaps AI detection tools work better on fiction vs. non-fiction. For scientific writing, I have trouble believing there is such a thing as accurate AI detection, but I haven't tried Pangram. Either way, AI detection tools are a bit useless in my view.
I understand AI detectors are important when filtering huge amount of texts. But if there's a single winning story to evaluate, shouldn't human jurors assessment be the gold standard?
And if they assess it's human written but it was actually AI assisted ... does it really matter?
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[ 2.8 ms ] story [ 23.3 ms ] threadSince the rise of "social media" driven by clicks on ads, quality has almost entirely been replaced by quantity. And now, creativity has been farmed out as well.
I still believe in quality.
George Monbiot said it years ago.
Advertising is a poison that demeans even love – and we're hooked on it.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2011/oct/24/advert...
It'd be more interesting if the article talked about the situations which literary editors and award committees would face, if they tried to reject submissions for (seemingly) being AI-generated.
I do free writing sometimes and devise some weird similes from time to time.
And if they assess it's human written but it was actually AI assisted ... does it really matter?