1 How an AI written Book Shows why the Tech 'Horrifies' Creatives
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For Christmas I received an intriguing present from a buddy - my extremely own "best-selling" book.

"Tech-Splaining for Dummies" (terrific title) bears my name and my image on its cover, and it has radiant evaluations.

Yet it was entirely composed by AI, with a few easy triggers about me provided by my pal Janet.

It's a fascinating read, and extremely funny in parts. But it likewise meanders quite a lot, and is someplace between a self-help book and historydb.date a stream of anecdotes.

It simulates my chatty design of composing, but it's also a bit repeated, and very verbose. It may have gone beyond Janet's prompts in collecting data about me.

Several sentences begin "as a leading innovation journalist ..." - cringe - which might have been scraped from an online bio.

There's also a mystical, repeated hallucination in the form of my feline (I have no animals). And there's a metaphor yewiki.org on practically every page - some more random than others.

There are lots of business online offering AI-book writing services. My book was from BookByAnyone.

When I contacted the president Adir Mashiach, based in Israel, he told me he had offered around 150,000 personalised books, mainly in the US, considering that rotating from compiling AI-generated travel guides in June 2024.

A paperback copy of your own 240-page long best-seller expenses ₤ 26. The company uses its own AI tools to produce them, based on an open source large language model.

I'm not asking you to purchase my book. Actually you can't - just Janet, who created it, can purchase any additional copies.

There is currently no barrier to anybody producing one in anybody's name, consisting of celebs - although Mr Mashiach says there are guardrails around violent material. Each book consists of a printed disclaimer stating that it is fictional, produced by AI, and developed "exclusively to bring humour and joy".

Legally, the copyright comes from the firm, but Mr Mashiach worries that the item is intended as a "customised gag present", and the books do not get sold even more.

He hopes to broaden his variety, producing various categories such as sci-fi, and perhaps offering an autobiography service. It's created to be a light-hearted type of customer AI - offering AI-generated goods to human clients.

It's also a bit terrifying if, like me, you write for a living. Not least because it most likely took less than a minute to produce, and it does, certainly in some parts, sound just like me.

Musicians, authors, artists and actors worldwide have expressed alarm about their work being used to train generative AI tools that then produce comparable content based upon it.

"We should be clear, when we are speaking about information here, we really suggest human creators' life works," states Ed Newton Rex, creator of Fairly Trained, [users.atw.hu](http://users.atw.hu/samp-info-forum/index.php?PHPSESSID=66b70e3cadbb1355086764e7b87a4ab3&action=profile