And the winner of the Dude bookmark is... dianneke!!!!
Email me at jennmck at yahoo dot com with you mailing address and I'll send your Dude bookmark.
JENN McKINLAY: Okay, AI is all we seem to hear about these days (if we ignore the war of choice) and I've had my opinions about AI from day one. We've even discussed it here before, but I think the prevalence of AI has gotten even worse since our discussion of Hallie's Generative What? post last September. Sometimes, I loosen up about its use and other times, well, no. I am currently in a "Oh, Hell No" place where I've blocked embedded AI (located in settings and switched it off) from my devices and refuse to use it in any form now.
I'm going to put aside the fact that Anthropic helped itself to 35 of my books, taking them without approval or compensation, and fed them into their machine to "teach" it. Yeah, no. Theft is theft. The lawsuit currently underway is offering artists a fraction (that they have to split 50/50 with their publisher, FFS) of what Anthropic would have paid had they bought the rights properly. Because of course they never offered to legitimately buy the rights as one of the grifting execs said, "That would be entirely too expensive." Yeah, no duh. I guess I'll just go take that new car I want from the dealership because paying for it would be entirely too expensive. Same thing, y'all. Theft is theft.
I'm also going to table the horrors of what AI and its required cooling Data Centers are going to do to our planet's environment. Wells polluted with forever chemicals, water made undrinkable, farms drying up, light pollution, noise pollution, communities forced to pay for a behemoth non job producing monster that tanks their property values as the cherry on top of the poop sundae.
Instead, what I'm going to pop off about is the actual creative process. I'm in what I call "proposal writing season." This means I've finished all of the books I had under contract and am now writing proposals for potential future books. This would seemingly be a grand place to use AI. I could open up one of their question boxes and say "outline a romcom with XY and Z tropes with an organic farm as the setting" and it would churn out exactly that using my prompts and the more input I fed it, the tighter it would be. I could even ask it to tailor the proposal to the voice of Jenn McKinlay (I know it has the capability because it stole so much of my work).
In fact, I did use AI to write an outline for a non-fiction piece I was asked to write last year. Non-fiction is not my jam and the outline was super helpful but it was a two paragraph OUTLINE not the article.
Fiction to me, however, is an organic thing. It lives and breathes in the heart and mind of the artist and it can't be replicated by a machine no matter how many books by the author the machine has been fed. My opinion about this cemented when I had an epiphany, sometimes they hit like lightning bolts and this one did.
I knew I needed another idea for a romcom. I enjoy writing them, but they are by far the hardest genre for me. All that sticky authentic emotional angst is excruciating when I just want to crack jokes and avoid feelings. Ha ha.
The well, as they say, was empty, almost like a Data Center had moved into my head and sucked it dry, ahem. But then, when I was putting my loaded dinner plate onto the table, an entire book appeared in my head and I audibly gasped. Hub immediately asked if I was all right, and I shouted yes as I ran from the room to write down the most awesome idea for a romcom ever. Now, here's the thing, this idea came from a conversation I'd had with a woman seventeen years ago that my brain suddenly trotted out and said, "Well, how about this?"
And here's where the struggle comes in. The spark had arrived but it took me another week of thinking, plotting, revising, rejecting, and scribbling on random pieces of paper when new ideas struck at an inconvenient times, to piece together how this story needed to be told. Could AI have offered a million suggestions on this part? Probably, yes. But the struggle is the important part. I needed ideas to fail so that stronger ideas would appear, a process that takes patience and tenacity.
And that's when I had my epiphany, not just about the book in my head, but the entire problem with AI. Creativity is magic. It comes from the human experience and takes all the bits and bobs of your life or the way you view the world, both of which are unique to you, and crafts them into art in whatever from you decide, whether it's a story or a painting or a performance, and no machine can ever, ever, ever produce anything other than derivative slop replicating that creative magic. Only a human can create something out of nothing. A machine can only produce a subpar imitation. I believe we should demand better of ourselves and the corporations trying to crush us by stealing our creativity and destroying our planet.
Reds and Readers, what are your thoughts on this?












I think you've voiced the major points, Jenn . . . it's beyond despicable that AI companies can simply help themselves to whatever they want. Although there MIGHT be some legitimate, legal use for AI in some as-yet-to-be-defined situation, I certainly have not seen it and I'm firmly in the "not using AI for anything" camp . . . .
ReplyDeleteThe environment was the tipping point for me. Nope. Nope. Nope.
DeleteWow, I loved this post. I really love all the posts here, I just have had little time to respond, due to the Portuguese class my husband and I have been taking this year. (It's almost over.) Thank you so much for your insights.
ReplyDeleteEnjoy your class. Elizabeth!
DeleteI agree completely with you, Jenn. I was expounding most of those points just last night with friends we had over for dinner. The creativity, the impact of data centers, the grift - all horrible. I had fifteen books stolen by Anthropic. No AI for me, evah.
ReplyDeleteThey are grifters. Grrrr.
DeleteJenn, you have voiced my feelings and my outrage at the theft of intellectual property by people who knew exactly what they were doing. Why no jail time? People go to prison if caught stealing cars.
ReplyDeleteAs for the data centers, local governments that give them permission need to be voted out next cycle. Enough!
Now for the one legitimate use of AI, medicine. Doctors are confirming its value every day. The new mammogram machines diagnosing problems early. That is value added. Otherwise, "Get off my lawn!"
I saw a reporter Karen Hao describe AI as a blanket term for so many things akin to using the word transportation to describe everything from riding a bike to a rocket and she said the current billionaire grifters are trying to convince everyone they need a rocket to go to the grocery store. So many good uses for AI but not in the Arts.
DeleteAI makes me very uncomfortable. I recently used it for a simple search about a deceased person and the medical examiner's report. The result? It told me the deceased person was currently the medical examiner in that county! Nope. It just feels like society is getting lax and lazy wanting to play more and work less, make more money by cutting corners wherever possible and failing to realize not just livelihoods, but creativity itself is being crushed. -- Victoria
ReplyDeleteExactly.
DeleteLove this post. AI can be useful, but there are so many problems with it--theft being a main theme, theft from artists and writers, theft of water, theft of electricity and theft of quality of life. If it helps read a CT scan, great. If it writes a novel, not great.
ReplyDeleteYup.
DeleteI have seen comments that AI didn't "steal" original work; it used it to train itself. No difference, in my book, and why defend theft, even for "training purposes"?
ReplyDeleteI am really freaked out by the number of data centers that have appeared. In Ohio alone--one of the biggest states for this--there are around 225, with a huge 10-gigawatt center being proposed about an hour from here ($30 billion).
A friend follows a Facebook page that features a beautiful older woman with a stunning figure spouting wisdom and aphorisms and funny comments. I am 95% sure she is AI, but my friend keeps saying how wise "she" is. It's creepy, very sci-fi.
Oh, dear Lord, that's terrifying. I hope it really is a lady with a filter. Eek.
DeleteOf course you are absolutely right, Jenn! Allowing anyone to steal what you have created is just dead wrong.
ReplyDeleteNow I too want to disable everything AI from my computer and phone. It is so frustrating to try to write an email to someone and then AI butts in with "suggestions." Or they try to summarize a message I've received and then they have taken all the work and thought by offering their own "suitable" reply.
Spelling corrections are one thing, but beyond that, don't mess with what I am saying. For that matter, I can fix my own misspelled words, or not. Who really cares?
100% Judi! When you do a search if you type -ai (negative/dash ai) in the search bar it doesn't use ai.
DeleteThank you!
DeleteJenn, amen! You are preaching to the choir, sister!!
ReplyDeleteI am glad to see community after community pushing back against data centers. There is one being completed nearby in the space previously occupied by a GM manufacturing plant. It's on the edge of the (small) city, but there's a neighborhood of houses right across the (busy) street. Restaurants, other small businesses. Did the township let anyone know what was being built? Did the township officials factor in the long-term cost of noise pollution? Water usage? Water quality?
Smaller city also nearby--data center or really really large warehouse? Right in the middle of a shopping residential area. As Karen notes, these are appearing all over Ohio--Republican governor, House, and Senate with super-majorities due to gerrymandering. But, people are pushing back. Small-town local governments are pushing back. There are glimmers of hope.
That's the thing, isn't it, Flora? These centers were forced on us in many of the locations, to heck with public safety and well-being.
DeleteJust like they take artists' work, they take communities without permission. It's BS.
DeleteAmen, Jenn, amen!!!!!
ReplyDelete:-)
DeleteThank you Jenn! The environment--or what will be left of it--is only the tip of the iceberg. The emotional void of coming up with your own ideas, the ease at which you can cheat and on and on. You voiced it so well. AI can help edit a communications piece for a country cub. It can help edit a newsletter for dotting the I's and crossing the t's, but you have to be so careful what you ask it. I have a friend who just plugged her memoir into AI (her story, yes, her words no.). She justified it by saying it was no different than having your agent or editor rewrite your story. Neither my agent or editor has EVER rewritten my stories. Suggestions? Yes. Rewriting, absolutely not. My young grandchildren wrote a mystery and then the youngest, knowing he is not good with punctuation, asked AI to edit it. What was young and fresh came out practically manicured. He was horrified and we threw his entire first chapter away because he didn't save the first draft.
ReplyDeleteGerri, you are so right. Editors and agents don't rewrite they suggest. Hugs to youngest. Losing a whole chapter. My heart hurts for him.
DeleteGreat post, so well stated Jenn. AI is the problem - but it is the people behind the AI that are the problem. They are in control. AI just give them quicker access to copyrighted material. It is going to become even worse in years to come. Artists, screenwriters, songwriters, writers in general, are facing this issue and it is terrible that government NOT is cracking down on this and giving writers more power to deal with it.
ReplyDeleteThe government is making bank from the AI companies and their lobbyists. It's going to take an abundance of massive lawsuits to get some regulation in place. Oy.
DeleteAnd writers or those with copyright infringement need to sue the heck out of them. It costs money for a lawyer but it costs more to lose to let it go and not sue.
DeleteJenn, I think that you illustrated the pitfalls of AI very well. I am not a fan of AI, though I admit that I use AI (if speech translation software is AI?) to help me communicate with people who do not know sign language. Though I can speak, I do have a "Deaf accent".
ReplyDeleteSide note to Hank: I sent you my finished article this weekend for Tuesday. Hope my guest post made it in time!
That's a good use of AI and there are good uses but it's all been lumped together in a money/power grab and just making a mess of things. *sigh*
DeleteJenn, you are so ON THE MONEY! Writing is magic... and (fortunately, so far) AI produced copy feels so readily recognizable. And it's outrageous that companies felt they were entitled to just take, chew up, digest, and use without so much as a BY YOUR LEAVE. Remember it wasn't that long ago that Google thought it was OK to offer GOOGLE BOOKS - without permission or payment.
ReplyDeleteYup. Again, money is the root of the AI problem, shocking no one.
DeleteA local contributor to our local newspaper (and an book author) who is hilarious - asked AI to write an article using her "style" and gave them a subject. She published the article written by AI and it was so far off how she writes and obviously lacked her humor. It was instantly recognizable as AI.
DeleteI was talking to my sister by cell phone and we spoke about Caribbean cruises. When we hung up, and this has never happened to me before, but my phone internet was flooded with ads and stories about Caribbean cruisies. I mean flooded! I wonder if my sister's phone is "spied" on or listened to? Is this possible? I've never had this happen again from any other phone conversation.
ReplyDeleteThat's a terrifying story.
DeleteData centers are the devil incarnate. The county in Kentucky from whence I bloomed is certain to have the proposed data center built. The re-zoning has already been approved. What is so infuriating, besides the loss of beautiful countryside and future costs in water and electricity to the community, is that the first year or so of planning is done in secret. If you have a greedy set of county commissioners and fiscal court, which my home county does, they plan in secret with the company wanting to put in the data center, and by the time the community knew what was going on, it was really to late to stop it. The local government officials involved all signed an NDA (Non-Disclosure Agreement) and people don't even know who the company is that wants to build it, but they assure people that it i a top Fortune 500 Company. People who have agreed to sell their farmland have also had to sign an NDA. In two famous rejections, a mother and daughter turned down a nine million dollar offer and another man turned down twenty-nine million. My brother, who died the day after Christmas, signed to sell 40 acres of his small farm, but I don't know how much he is getting for it. So, there's all this secrecy and all this money, and, oh, promise of jobs. There will be jobs during the construction, but after that very few employees will be needed to operate the center, and those employees are likely to come from outside the community. I have a good friend who owns a farm that has been in the family for generations and is fighting the data center, but the few elected officials who decide the matter and the company coming in are steps ahead of those who found out later and are in opposition. And, there are many in opposition, but it doesn't matter because it's just a handful of people who decide, and I'm sure they've been well compensated. Personally this affects me because of my childhood memories of the land and especially my first love of babbling brooks running along the land. This data center will eventually be a burden that the community will realize, with its tremendous use of water and power required to run it. Oh, and I forgot to mention an exemption from sales and use taxes for 50 years on their computer equipment. As you say, Jenn, money is the root of the problem.
ReplyDeleteI am shocked that your books and any books can be stolen like they were and that the lawsuit offers so little to authors in compensation. Why is that not against the law, to steal the books that way? Doesn't copyright have any power?