L1aei
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2025
- Messages
- 1,049
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- 113
So... first off, I don't do well in initiating my own little thread; case in point, my last one died like roadkill. But I've been thinking a lot about how everybody feels over the usage of AI here and other writing communities, especially when some authors use it as a crutch rather than a tool. Frankly, I want you all to throw your opinions down here on how we should approach it; like, maybe constructive feedback in these situations rather than throwing tomatoes until the farmers complain about vacant pastures.
Really, I've established my opinion that AI isn't bad. We already use it as a refinement tool, for brainstorming, or for smoothing over spelling, grammar, and that sometimes funny autofill on our smartphones. That isn't an issue if the human, the meatbag, writers remain the creative driver.
The problem I see emerges when AI starts writing the story and the efforts from the sloshing 97% water sitting on their asses simply copy and paste the generated slop to claim it is theirs. That sucks and I won't support it... hell, I'll even join you all with handing out torches and pitchforks, maybe bring a sturdy rope and suggest which wooden branch can support the tub of lard.
Right, back to the topic here... feedback matters more, not taunts and ridicule. Even if AI contributes, writers, readers, and reviewers should focus on what's actually on the page. If a story entertains and resonates, that's validating in my book. But if the AI driving down the speed ramp starts road-raging at the human's own efforts, it's worth flagging in a constructive way to say "You made a mistake, but it wasn't what you wrote, it's listening to the corrections from the bucket of bolts" here.
Back to lynching, tone and method matter a lot. There's a fine line already in the sand and I've not only seen but participated in the debates between educating someone about voice preservation and triggering defensiveness. I've seen authors shut down when they feel attacked about AI usage, even when the feedback is valid... technically.
Now to my questions. How do you differentiate between constructive feedback and being the local police over AI use? Like, do you address AI-influenced writing at all in your critiques, or do you focus purely on what's been delivered already on the page... do you even go that far if the request appears AI generated? Also how do you ensure your advice actually helps the authors improve rather than just pointing out that AI was used?
Overall, I do care about preserving authentic, fleshy and flawed voice and encouraging growth and recovery, whether AI is part of the process or not. That's my opinion. What's yours?
Really, I've established my opinion that AI isn't bad. We already use it as a refinement tool, for brainstorming, or for smoothing over spelling, grammar, and that sometimes funny autofill on our smartphones. That isn't an issue if the human, the meatbag, writers remain the creative driver.
The problem I see emerges when AI starts writing the story and the efforts from the sloshing 97% water sitting on their asses simply copy and paste the generated slop to claim it is theirs. That sucks and I won't support it... hell, I'll even join you all with handing out torches and pitchforks, maybe bring a sturdy rope and suggest which wooden branch can support the tub of lard.
Right, back to the topic here... feedback matters more, not taunts and ridicule. Even if AI contributes, writers, readers, and reviewers should focus on what's actually on the page. If a story entertains and resonates, that's validating in my book. But if the AI driving down the speed ramp starts road-raging at the human's own efforts, it's worth flagging in a constructive way to say "You made a mistake, but it wasn't what you wrote, it's listening to the corrections from the bucket of bolts" here.
Back to lynching, tone and method matter a lot. There's a fine line already in the sand and I've not only seen but participated in the debates between educating someone about voice preservation and triggering defensiveness. I've seen authors shut down when they feel attacked about AI usage, even when the feedback is valid... technically.
Now to my questions. How do you differentiate between constructive feedback and being the local police over AI use? Like, do you address AI-influenced writing at all in your critiques, or do you focus purely on what's been delivered already on the page... do you even go that far if the request appears AI generated? Also how do you ensure your advice actually helps the authors improve rather than just pointing out that AI was used?
Overall, I do care about preserving authentic, fleshy and flawed voice and encouraging growth and recovery, whether AI is part of the process or not. That's my opinion. What's yours?