Comment by ijk
1 day ago
Ironically, the story can be read as gesturing in that direction, as it's ostensibly about giving a new title to a particular job.
In general, though, I think part of the mistake people keep making is that they try to imitate what would be value to engage with if a human wrote it, in an attempt to claim the role of an author of a book or whatever. There's likely artforms that are unique to what an LLM can facilitate, but trying to imitate human artforms is going to give you stunted results. The AI is very good at imitating the form but not the substance.
Once we stop trying to generate and pass off AI essays, novels, choose your own adventure stories, and all the other human genres as being human writing, we'll have a chance to figure out actually interesting artistic forms.
Yes. In the end what mattered truly was the expression.
However - since we are humans - we also care about the artist.
Creating something without the effort previous works involved, can and do affect the context and understanding of it.
Hah - just thought of one good example: how would people feel about talking to only fans creators, if they didn’t know it was AI.
> Creating something without the effort previous works involved, can and do affect the context and understanding of it
not really. Unless you place value on _effort_, rather than be objectively outcome based. Someone digging a hole with a spoon doesn't make it a better hole than a jackhammer.
I maintain that the work itself - that is, the contents of what is being expressed - is the sole judgement of how good the works is. Not the authorship, LLM-usage or otherwise.
Eh, by that same argument, how would LLMs fair when the content of the work itself is about “Something made by a human”.
A core fact about information, is that signal only exists in the right context.
As an illustrative example: A string of static or gibberish numbers converts to signal when we have the right tools to interpret it.
You could see a bunch of rocks arranged on a beach, while someone who understands the local language may see an SOS.
Culture itself keeps evolving, and teenagers reuse language to create jargon that makes sense to them, but is opaque to others.
I am arguing that your point is true, but its phrasing focuses on the Platonic ideal, and avoiding the messy practical context of communication.
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