it doesn't surprise me that there is some reflected mimicry of 'llm speak' in people's online postings, many use LLMs to write or edit posts anyway.
StriderTR wrote on 2025-12-10, 08:15:
Problem is, with so called "AI" doing all the work, people wont bother learning the proper way of doing those things.
Mostly, to become good at something, you must first be bad, then mediocre, then above average then good
AI short circuits straight to mediocre. If you can formulate sufficient meaning in a prompt you'll get something mediocre but useful back.
This removes the need to jump the first few hurdles in learning, and robs the person of the experience of being bad or wrong, of what if took to improve and the kind of experience and thinking that gives someone sufficient thinking skill to know when an 'answer' is contradictory or suspect.
The effect may be to reduce the total number of people who share the formative experience of having to develop skills and reasoning in pursuit of some goal
zyzzle wrote on 2025-12-10, 01:11:
Revisionist history doesn't even begin to describe the sense of unreality of the future.
That's why I hang on tightly to my home library of over 10,000 volumes -- all of which were written by real people, most of whom were great scholars who cared about and treaded carefully with their material. There's a reason it used to take 6 months (at least) to get published - proofreaders, fact checkers, professionals who peer-reviewed your book before it was in print. These things matter -- and all have now been chucked out into the abyss like some worthless rubbish. Sad but true in this AI age.
Its good that you do, and i say the same for collectors of all books, records, films etc.
However imagine a water droplet against a tsunami, that is the proportional difference. anecdotally just look at the most popular / viral social media, look at the total clicks AI generated stuff is getting. Then compare that to the attention that more guarded observers get, collectors of books, optical media, those who speak about preservation - whatever. Sure it looks like a big scene from the inside, but step out and it looks like some tiny typewriter collector club in an era of voice recognition.
And i am constantly surprised by those who don't care about or understate concerns about the AI generated revision of past.
At one level its those photos that merge you back into the group as if someone else took the pic, the result is a picture of something that isn't an actual event. I've seen videos of someone apparently speaking in English with accent, with perhaps something slightly off about how the mouth formed the English words - indeed it was generated in the persons voice, translated, and video AI edited to make it look English. It is a fabrication. The same will almost certainly happen in tv and films.
As example and in greater effect, it will be easy to not just edit out some scene in a movie, but to edit the scene itself - replace the visuals and dialog, sound, to suit some idea, to such an extent that you won't even realise it if you didn't know the original. In the end maybe even everything that is culture will be generated - all songs, films/tv, books, art - all generated on the fly at individual whim/prompt then forgotten just as quickly, an experience unshared, isolated, leaving no cultural impression.