Categories
Future Building Technology Writing

“Algogen” missing the point

Liked AI, Algogen, and Anti-Poetry (Baldur Bjarnason)

I’ve lost count of how many people in tech (and marketing, natch) who say that algogen text is just as good as that written by people. They genuinely don’t see the limited vocabulary, word repetition, incoherence, and simplistic use of sentence structure. They only aspire to perfect, non-threatening mediocrity and algogen text delivers that. They don’t care the role writing has in forming your own thoughts and creativity. They don’t care about how writing improves memory and recall. They don’t value the role of creativity in the text itself.

For them, it’s all about the idea.

That algogen fans are predominantly idea people—the lot who think that 99% of the value delivered by any given form of media comes from the idea—isn’t a new observation, but it’s apt. If you don’t think the form or structure of the medium delivers any value, then it has to be a uniform commodity that can, and should, be generated algorithmically to save people from the tedious work of pointless creation.

Algogen is a great mashup word.

See also: AIs can write for us but will we actually want them to? by Bryan Braun

That made me think about my own writing. If I had to break down my current writing activity (not counting code), it would look something like this:

 

10% – Journaling

10% – Blog posts

20% – Texting and Personal Emails

10% – Meeting notes / todos

35% – Programming notes (usually to help me work through tricky coding issues)

15% – Book notes

 

Could I hand any of these over to AI?

Categories
Activism Resources and Reference

Lookup tool for PAC money

Bookmarked OpenSecrets (OpenSecrets)

OpenSecrets is the nation’s premier research and government transparency group tracking money in politics and its effect on elections and policy.

Categories
Meta Personal Growth Resources and Reference

Template spreadsheet for tracking reading diversity

Bookmarked Introducing the 2023 Reading Log! (bookriot.com)

The 2023 reading log is here! It can help you track your reading stats and generate infographics to help you achieve your reading goals.

👀 This could be handy for tracking my reading.

Categories
Music

Album roundups

Bookmarked Album Whale | Staff Picks (Album Whale)

People are making lists of albums on Album Whale and you can too!

Visual lists of albums curated by individual people — might be a good place to search for recommendations though if you haven’t heard of the band it’s hard to know if it’s a genre you like 🤷‍♀️

Categories
Websites

SubtoMe button lets people subscribe to feeds easily

Bookmarked SubtoMe (subtome.com)

Universal Follow Button

SubToMe makes it easy for people to follow web sites, because browsers don’t do it.

Categories
Technology Writing

Bias is baked into the current state of AI fiction writing

Bookmarked Wordcraft Writers Workshop (g.co)

The Wordcraft Writers Workshop is a collaboration between Google’s PAIR and Magenta teams, and 13 professional writers. Together we explore the limits of co-writing with AI.

Interesting assessment of co-writing with an AI — it’s limited by its inability to perceive / remember context, a very generic, stereotyped and mainstream understanding of genre and stories, and mediocre prose without voice.

Allison Parrish described this as AI being inherently conservative. Because the training data is captured at a particular moment in time, and trained on language scraped from the internet, these models have a static representation of the world and no innate capacity to progress past the data’s biases, blind spots, and shortcomings.

The computer trying to insert a man into a lesbian love story 😬 We see time and again technology incorporating and reflecting real world biases. It feels like they think preventing bias is an afterthought, something that can be fixed after the fact. These tools will likely become quite important in the future.  Can someone integrate people of color and queer people into their design process upfront?

I am intrigued by co-design, and feel like this project could benefit from it: learning upfront from writers what their biggest struggles are and where they wish they could have assistance. This feels a bit like, “we made a thing that makes words, let’s have some actual writers try it out and see what they do with it 🤷‍♀️”

One thing that writers often need is bit part characters. With existing biases, will the AI suggest all straight white men to fill these roles? When they create characters of color will they be caricatures?

Again, the training set proves itself essential to the tool — and behind many of its failings.

I read Robin Sloan’s short story, which was a clever little work that capitalized on the program’s strengths while critiquing reliance on shortcuts (and maybe poking a bit of fun at GRRM).

Categories
Learning Resources and Reference

Find good longreads and unearth old articles worth reading

Bookmarked Read Something Great (Read Something Great)

Timeless articles from the belly of the internet.
Manually curated. Served 5 at a time.

Like this idea. Somewhat wary about the curation: who’s choosing the articles (one person, an editorial team…?), do they have selection criteria that considers bias in publishing and draws from reputable sources, what is their background (do they have a political bias or subject focus, if so do those complement my views and interests?), where are they sourcing these articles? No transparency on the website.

Categories
Art and Design Resources and Reference

Text cleaner tool

Bookmarked Text Cleaner: Text Formatter, Text Formatting Online (textcleaner.net)

Text Cleaner is Text Formatting online tool to format text, clean up spaces, line breaks, Strip HTML, unformat text, replace text online, text formatter and all text operations.

Categories
Activism Learning Resources and Reference

Disability justice for organizations

Bookmarked Disability Justice Audit (northwesthealth.org)

“Disability Justice: An Audit Tool” is aimed at helping Black, Indigenous and POC-led organizations (that are not primarily focused around disability) examine where they’re at in practicing disability justice, and where they want to learn and grow. It includes questions for self-assessment, links to access tools, organizational stories and more.

Categories
Fun Places Travel

Find cool places to stop on long drives

Bookmarked Make My Drive Fun (makemydrivefun.com)

Waypoint pop-up looks a little buggy but worth checking for road trip / trip planning ideas 💡