• RampantParanoia2365@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    It’s not writing anything for me. It’s suggesting where I’m not making things clear, or where a quicker pace or punchier phrasing might help, awkward prose, inconsistent character voice, etc. And something to bounce ideas off of, like “does this make sense?”

    And I can respond, and it adjusts, and helps me get to a baseline standard before a human looks at it–who I sent a draft to a few days ago. It’s 100% my own ideas, words, scene staging, and story. I still rewrote entire sections even though it said they were solid.

    I don’t know a lot of writers, and getting friends and family to read 5 pages, let alone 2,000 words, or 13 chapters is near impossible. Critique meetups and such are only so helpful.

    And I’ve never done this before, yet I’ve actually created something, which ChatGPT made a little easier by acting as a mostly competent editor with mostly mediocre creative instincts, anyway. Sometimes it’s nonsense, or forgets character traits, but it’s more helpful than zero support.

    6 months ago I had no clue I was capable of anything like this, but now I’m doing it, and frankly it’s a pretty original story. Would you not consider that a positive use?

    • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      But by doing so, you’ve surrendered your voice. You say it makes things clearer, but sometimes ambiguity is good. You say it makes quicker and punchier phrasing, but some writing is best done low and slow. LLMs are by their nature the least common denominator, all the color of the creative world melted down and blended into a uniform grey. By relying on the LLM to alter your writing style, you’re making your writing more bland, generic, and indistinguishable from everyone else. You’re giving up what makes your writing you’re writing. You’re just another hand for the machine.

      I do not consider it a positive use, as I would rather read imperfect human writing than grammatically perfect machine drivel. Imperfections are not a reason to enjoy human-created works. They’re the only thing that makes the works worth appreciating.

    • ClamDrinker@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      Not OP, but I’m glad you’re getting empowered. That’s imo the best use for it. It’s crazy to me how many people write this off, not understanding many aspiring creatives need these kinds of stepping stones to stay motivated. Because logically, if what you make takes off and becomes popular, at some point human employees are probably the better option than AI. And as you said, without AI you might have never taken the first leap. So it would end up creating more livelihood for creatives than taking away.