Despite all the anxiety artificial intelligence has caused creatives, fiction writing "isn't an application of AI that OpenAI has explored much", said TechCrunch.
Until now, that is. In a post on X, the AI firm's CEO, Sam Altman, shared a 1,172 word short story written by a new large language model that is "really good" at creative writing.
Altman said the story, based on a prompt asking for "a metafictional literary short story about AI and grief", was the first time he had been "really struck by something written by AI", adding "it got the vibe of metafiction so right".
AI has typically been associated with STEM fields like maths and programming, but OpenAI has "struggled to develop monetisable products" in those sectors, market research analyst Reece Hayden told CNET. But he said the company was "likely to experience significant backlash from creative industries as their intellectual property concerns are seemingly coming true".
Considering the speed with which OpenAI is "spitting out these powerful new models", the "future is not bright for flesh and blood authors", said Lance Ulanoff at TechRadar. Soon, publishing houses will be able to "engineer vast, epic tales spanning a thousand pages" that are "indistinguishable from those written by George RR Martin".
But not everyone is buying it. The new model's writing, "while more verbose, still sucks", said Kyle Barr at Gizmodo. Altman is trying to "create a new market for ChatGPT subscriptions by promising uncreative people they can take the reins from the literary elite". But "even if you imagine that a human created this, it's still trash". And knowing AI created it makes it "doubly trash". |