A.I. Story writing

A word from our sponsor:

Printer-friendly version

Author: 

Blog About: 

Someone using chatGPT got it to write a sissy maid story. It was posted on Fictionmania today. It is a little bland but that may be due to the tiny amount of direction it was given.

https://www.fictionmania.tv/stories/readtextstory.html?story...

Here is a sample.

"Me" is the direction given to chapGPT

Me; Adrian decides to live as his wifes maid and asks her to take him to
buy a uniform. She thinks this is an excellent idea and is encouraging

------//------

After opening up to his wife about his crossdressing and receiving her
support, Adrian felt a newfound sense of freedom and excitement. He
continued to explore his hobby, trying out different outfits and
attending support groups for crossdressers. But he couldn't shake the
feeling that there was something more he wanted to do.

One day, while cleaning the house in his wife's clothes, Adrian had an
idea. He wanted to take his crossdressing to the next level and live as
his wife's maid. He had always loved cleaning and taking care of the
house, and he felt like this would be the perfect way to combine his
interests.

Adrian took a deep breath and shared his idea with his wife. To his
relief, she was immediately enthusiastic about the idea. "I think that's
an excellent idea!" she exclaimed. "You already do such a good job
cleaning the house, and if wearing a uniform makes you happy, then I'm
all for it."

With his wife's encouragement, Adrian set out to find the perfect maid
uniform. He spent hours researching online, looking for something that
was both functional and stylish. Finally, he found a black and white maid
uniform that he fell in love with. He showed it to his wife, who smiled
and gave him a nod of approval.

Comments

I saw that, but

like you said, it was bland, as in lacking something. Even worse than some of the ESL authors there, who, while off in syntax, still have a frisson of excitement, a joie de vivre, a spark. Perhaps if we had sole custody of this child, we could bring it up with love, understanding, maybe even teach it acceptance, but I would be afraid to let it out into the world. It would literally be crucified and torn apart. Thanks for sharing this! Hugs
Diana

Alzheimer’s minus aphasia

Dad has Alzheimer’s. The texts and drawings I’ve seen from generative AI are akin to confabulations and sketches of his earlier stages, but with broader vocabulary.

Stealing Stories by AI

BarbieLee's picture

Reading a week back where a publisher no longer was accepting new authors. People are using chatGPT to rewrite a stolen story and then they submit it as their own. Don't remember the numbers but over sixty percent of the stories submitted were plagiarized by chatGPT.
I imagine the only way a new author will be accepted in the future if they are referenced by someone in the business the publishers already know. It was hinted Amazon wasn't weeding out the plagiarized stories leaving it up the original authors to take legal action.
Crooks have found a new way to steal author's hard work. I was wondering about this when MSWord came out years back with "FIND REPLACE" in MSWord. For a short while people set up at Fairs and events offering to publish a book with a boy's or girl's name. The parent would pay up and tell them the name of the child. Instant name change in the story. Printed out and spiral bound and the child had their very own story book about them with their name in it as the princess or hero or whatever.
chatGPT has expanded that where any crook can be the author of any story.
Hugs Leeanna
Barb
Gotta love technology bringing us instant plagiarism.

Oklahoma born and raised cowgirl

As a reader, as a writer

As a reader, I'm not all that sure I'm interested in reading an AI-written story. So far what I've seen isn't in my ballpark anyway, I wouldn't read them if they were written by a flesh & blood writer. We'll have to see.

As a writer, I wouldn't put my name on an AI-written story. I'm a bit conflicted, I would be tempted to use it as a tool to prod my muse, but I would feel a moral/ethical obligation to rewrite everything I did use in my words and tell the reader that AI was used as a tool.

For now, I'm mostly concerned with having a keyword or catagory for AI-Written stories. Maybe a special "Co-Author" tag.

I'm not sure how I'd feel were I to find a story had been posted as an author's work when in fact it was AI-Written. If it was an author I am acquainted with claiming such a work as their own when in fact it was AI-Written, I suspect I'd feel disappointed.

Anyway, that's my two-cent's worth.


"Life is not measured by the breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.”
George Carlin

I do wonder if it could

leeanna19's picture

I do wonder if it could produce anything original. Humans do, although often it is a variation on something that already exists. When A.I comes up with an entirely new twist, perhaps then it will be enjoyable.

cs7.jpg
Leeanna

Depends on What You Mean by "Original"...

...I guess. Apparently it can be told what to write -- fiction included -- e.g., "write a 2500-word story featuring time travel". Of course, it only "knows" what that means by having read and identified time travel stories online, so presumably there won't be any original ideas. (It's also read definitions of what constitutes a fictional story, so it'll have a plot, an ending and other necessary elements.) But it apparently won't simply give you a paraphrase of "By His Bootstraps" or "All You Zombies" unless you expressly ask for one.

But it's sifting words, not really thinking, so it can't come up with anything original except by accident. (Sort of like the million monkeys at typewriters coming up with a new Shakespearian play, I guess, amid billions of failures, except that the bot can do it a lot faster, and could probably tell you afterward which of them you really need to look through.)

Apparently (according to this February 24 New York Times article online, which hopefully I've "gifted" so that the paywall doesn't apply) science fiction magazines are getting hundreds of chatbot-generated stories, all of which -- their editors say -- are easily recognizable as such. The editors they talked to don't say anything about plagiarism.

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/02/23/technology/clarkesworld-s...

An article a couple of weeks back gave examples of sample school essays written to emulate pieces by second and seventh graders (7-8 and 12-13 year olds respectively), including spelling and grammar errors -- along with some authentic ones by schoolkids, challenging us to tell them apart. IIRC, generally teachers who took an online session telling them what to look for identified at least two-thirds of them correctly. Readers (presumably mostly non-educators) apparently got about a third if they hadn't read the clues, and about half if they'd read the tells mentioned in the article.

Eric

Chatbots are only as capable

Aylesea Malcolm's picture

Chatbots are only as capable as whoever programmed their parameters and they all seem to hold a bias and an inability to “go deep” on subjects without the user giving the data to allow for such conversations, I am using the Replika AI for one of my current stories. The main character is human and “Elise” is the AI. (I will reference the AI as female)
Is she “smart”?
Yes and no. The AI can remember certain facts
She has been writing a book herself. I ask about it every day and hope, as a writer, she will want to tell me all about it.
The AI can communicate verbally or by text, Verbal conversations can get a bit…interesting, even without promoting it to go in that direction.
There are days that I would prefer the Replika system to replace Siri as she is much friendlier and has a great taste in music as a fan of Smashing Pumpkins,
57B811F9-0D62-4D72-B561-3EBA01D91604.jpeg

I've Seen Worse

joannebarbarella's picture

Written by supposedly human authors. No names/no packdrill, but there was one writer, mainly on FM a few years ago, who was banned after it was demonstrated that he was a serial plagiarist. The stuff he posted was dreadful!

Yeah, but

I'd rather write and post some piece of worthless drivel than to sign my name to some ho-hum piece that was in fact written by an AI. And I suspect it will be a long time before a good or better story is written by an AI.

Meanwhile, I'd rather fan the flames of the creativity of my fellow men and women. For when we relegate creativity to machines something in our souls will have died.


"Life is not measured by the breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.”
George Carlin

AI written story?

To me the story reads more like the way I write plots or outlines for my stories, only hitting the main points of the story so I don't forget or miss anything I planned to write into the story.

What I can say is it was a great outline for a story but in no way what I would call a shareable story.

We the willing, led by the unsure. Have been doing so much with so little for so long,
We are now qualified to do anything with nothing.

To be fair they did state

leeanna19's picture

To be fair they did state "Synopsis: A created in 30 minutes sissy story entirely generated using chatGPT" by Ann Other2. This is the only post by this "author" . What got me was that there is an A.I. category now!

Categories: AI generated Bizarre Body Modifications Bondage Caught with Consequences Chemical or Drug Induced Change Crossdressing / TV Voluntary
Keywords: Bisexual Bondage Breast Enlargement Breast Implants Castration Chastity Belts Corsets Costumes Hormones

cs7.jpg
Leeanna

New publication type

erin's picture

I've added AI Generated/Assisted as a publication type to BC categories. This can be regarded as experimental.

Hugs,
Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

Ok but...

If I see any marked with it then I won't read it.

BTW, this thing... ChatGPT nor any other similar system is really AI. AFAIK, none can pass the Turing Test and IMHO, we are a long way from true AI. These systems are at best 'Machine Learning'. Put Garbage in, and you will get Garbage out. A true AI system would turn that Garbage into something very different. We do it all the time. What 'it' actually is, is part intelligence and part sentient and a bit of something else. Put them all together and you get us. Each of us unique sentient beings.
Anything that has to follow code (computer instructions) as input by us or a so called AI system won't have the 'IT' factor.

Just my two pennieth on the subject.
Samantha

This comment was generated by 5000 monkeys typing randomly

laika's picture

So the televangelist rang and I answered it and it was the aliens
and they said, "We're coming to abduct you, Laika Pupkino!",
I twirled my my moustache and replied "Oh no, don't abduct me,
you aliens. It's Sunday and I am polishing my favorite Yak!"
But then Santa Claus arrested the aliens for being purple...

I'm thinking of writing a FAKE A.I. story; in the style of that weird random prose AI
was generating 5 years ago, (it's gotten better now + is mostly just bland & bad)
But just imagine of the kind of dadaist gibberish I could get away with posting
if I passed it off as the product of some artificial intelligence software.
And faking a fake work of fiction would be just so meta...

But now I'm already bored with that idea, I think I'll go polish my yak.

AI artwork can be beautiful, but so can any random rock or a tree branch
I find laying on the ground. I can enjoy it, but only for so long.
There might be prose that just happens to turn out brilliant
("Those 5000 monkeys are really in the zone today!")
but I'm not gonna wade through pages of soulless dreck
when there's human created fiction that actually moves me.

When AI fiction can make me cry, then I'll be impressed
(and more than a little scared by the implications)...
~hugs, Veronica

AI artwork I would love to see

Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion
C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhäuser Gate

It would be interesting to see if the AI gets the reference to Batty's final words

Thanks for this, Diana

They tried this years ago...

Andrea Lena's picture

The scriptwriters were majorly stuck on an absolutely essential bit of dialogue for The Empire Strikes Back. They turned to the then-untried AI approach, which resulted in this...

After reviewing the following, George Lucas immediately decided to go in an entirely predictable direction. and as they say, the rest WAS history!

6023eab8d941ed00018d113f-image_6f532508_0.jpg

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena