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Are readers generating fiction with AI models?

24 pointsby ilamonttoday at 5:21 PM32 commentsview on HN

Comments

_matt_today at 6:19 PM

Interesting analysis, but data "was collected between April 2023 and May 2024", so this predates even the release of GPT 4o.

Sebguertoday at 7:00 PM

SillyTavern and the size of like Character.ai at its peak shows pretty obviously that people are doing exactly this!

bawolfftoday at 7:00 PM

> We show that users especially gravitate toward fanfiction and erotica

Why am i not surprised its primarily porn

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MarkusQtoday at 6:20 PM

> Are readers generating fiction with AI models?

Why not? Journalists, lawyers and pundits of various stripes are already doing it. Why shouldn't readers?

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piloto_ciegotoday at 6:40 PM

I had a sci-fi plot sketched out in my head, I had Codex give a whack at it. It was "ok" - not the worst content I've ever read, not the best. It was "sufficient."

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saltwatercowboytoday at 7:02 PM

Language game solipsism

lubujacksontoday at 6:42 PM

So fans have fan fiction because they love certain worlds and characters and want more of it, or to riff on the base to take stories in new directions. We have things like TV tropes so it is no small stretch to, say, generate sitcom-type stories from Harry Potter or GoT that can continue forever. But where does all of this lead?

Music has sinilar issues, but I think of this like the compression/loudness issue in music production. Everything gets amplified so the range of everything is compressed. And then it gets boring and people slowly jump ship for something else.

I think there will be a wave of AI slop that improves and might actually be exciting on some vector, but we will get bored eventually. Humans crave newness, even if that new thing is worse in exactly the ways that defined good previously, like punk in response to complex rock albums.

AI can combine ideas in interesting ways, but it is by design a predictor of what is most likely. This is directly odds with the concept of newness (and arguably, human-ness) which is baked in to what we consider interesting and relevant.

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sriramgopalantoday at 5:56 PM

This is interesting. We have seen the internet change many fields and democratize them. For instance, only a few media outlets produced news stories and analysis, the rest of us consumed it. Blogging changed that.

Only a few studios produced shows. With Youtube etc., many of the consumers could become producers themselves.

If I read this correctly, books and fiction are headed in the same direction.

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m_m_carvalhotoday at 7:14 PM

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