Featured Photo: Artificial evolution in it’s Y2K form
If you have online access, you’re no stranger to the growing buzz on Artificial Intelligence and its generative powers. Generative AI is assisting the online workforce with a plethora of new features from writing full length informative and fictional novels to generating images used in publications across the internets. But, there’s dark shadow looming over the newfound science. Analysts from the D’accord Institute of Modern Science have put together some numbers and are estimating a lifespan to certain AI generative programs.
“With the user load of an approximate average of 2 billion people using AI to generate, edit and publish new books into the direct publishing platforms we’ll have extinguished all variations of the written language and copy-written them to void at least 40% of most stereotypical fiction and non fiction story formats by the year 2050.” Analysts say.
Basically, these analysts are saying that you can only say something the same way so many times before you’ve repeated yourself. “You can tell, when generating AI images, when an image is asked to produce a sign with English characters, the characters themselves are distorted and out of order, to avoid possible copyright.”
“With the inability to produce or publish anything new, massive chunks of any story line wouldn’t be included. You won’t be able to write the good parts of a novel without expanding global languages used to publish. You’d need… mm.. bft… god! At least ten new words daily, and that’s if we started rewriting language immediately.”
Not an actual News Media post/ For entertainment purposes only