Basically every time AI tries to create its own thing, it's incrementally shittier than whatever it trained on. As more and more AI - produced content floods the internet, it's increasingly training on AI - generated material. The effect is analogous to scanning and printing the same document over and over again, where it ultimately becomes a blurry mess. AI cannot create on its own, it can only modify pre-existing human work.

The article's main solution is to keep some kind of master backup of work labelled as existing before the rise of LLMs, but isn't optimistic of this actually happening. I'm wondering if in a few years the "write TV script" button on chatGPT generates completely unworkable garbage, will studios stop trying to pretend it's a viable replacement for writing staff?

  • ssjmarx [he/him]
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    I like it to prompt me. I spend a lot of time staring at blank documents, but if a bot can throw a couple sentences at me I can get the creativity going much easier.

    But the final product always ends up being 95%+ my own writing anyway. I like what the AI gives me but its form is normally pretty bland. Still useful enough that I'm subbed to Novel AI for their biggest LLM.