by James Scott Bell
@jamesscottbell
Mel Brooks and Carl Reiner had a routine called The 2000-Year-Old Man. Reiner played a reporter interviewing the world’s oldest man, who would tell him all sorts of things that happened in the distant past. One time the subject was religion:
REINER: Did you believe in anything?
BROOKS: Yes, a guy, Phil. Philip was the leader of our tribe.
REINER: What made him the leader?
BROOKS: Very big, very strong, big beard, big arms, he could just kill you. He could walk on you and you would die.
REINER: You revered him?
BROOKS: We prayed to him. Would you like to hear one of our prayers? “Oh Philip. Please don’t take our eyes out and don’t pinch us and don’t hurt us. Amen.”
REINER: How long was his reign?
BROOKS: Not too long. Because one day, Philip was hit by lightning. And we looked up and said, “There’s something bigger than Phil.”
I’ll return to this later.
I was too busy to give a thoughtful reply to Terry’s post about Amazon and their new “Ask This Book” feature. Enough has been said about it there—and everywhere—that the issues are clear.
Most pressing for authors and publishers are copyright and permission. Does this feature, which provides plot summaries and character analyses, violate copyright? Or is it more like a flexible version of CliffsNotes?
Or is ATB different in kind? The Authors Guild thinks so. It argues that what Amazon is doing is creating an interactive book from the original material, i.e., another iteration of an author’s intellectual property, for which the author should receive compensation. I suspect there is a lot more to come on this matter.
It should be noted that someone can go straight to AI now and ask for a summary and analysis of a book. I went to Grok and asked for a summary of a thriller by one of my favorite authors. I got it. Accurately, too. Without spoilers. When I asked specifically for the spoiler answer to the ultimate mystery, I got that, too. I then asked for an analysis of the main characters. Check. (In deference to the author, from whom I did not seek permission, I will not post the answers.) Is ATB merely a more convenient way for a reader to get the same information?
And speaking of permission, this feature is being rolled out by Amazon without giving the author or publisher the choice to opt in or out, as with DRM. This has raised the temperature in many a discussion. Given that, what should an author do? I don’t think many will pull their ebooks off Amazon in protest, because Amazon is their biggest revenue stream. It’s irrelevant whether one is wide or exclusive.
Which brings me back to Phil. Because there’s something bigger than Amazon in all this. And that is Artificial Intelligence itself. We all know it’s here, it’s growing, and it’s here to stay. There have been innumerable discussions, debates, and jeremiads on how writers use this borg. For me, the firm no-go zone is having it generate text that is cut-pasted into a book, even though AI can now replicate a writer’s particular style (see Joe Konrath’s recent post and the examples therein).
What I’m most concerned about is the larger issue of melting brains. Using AI as a substitute for hard thinking atrophies the gray matter. “Use it or lose it” is real. In the past, a reader who wanted to know what’s happened in a book had to “flip back” actual pages to find out. That was work, and therefore good for the noggin. AI bypasses that neural network.
This brain rot is bad for the species, especially among the young. It tears my heart out to see a man or woman walking down the street, looking at their phone, while pushing a stroller with a toddler in it, who is likewise staring at a device full of dancing monkeys or pink rabbits. That child’s brain is being robbed of essential foundations built only by looking around at the real world in wonder.
The school years used to be a daily session of ever more complex thinking. Learning to write a persuasive essay—with a topic paragraph and supporting arguments—was once a major goal of education. Now AI can do that for you in seconds, so you can go back to playing Candy Crush.
We all know this. But what can we do about it? Take responsibility for our own actions. Don’t let AI do all the work for us, or for our kids and grandkids.
And if you’re upset with Amazon’s ATB, cool your jets and register a polite response to KDP customer service. There’s enough vitriol out there. We’re awash in so much Ghostbusters II mood slime now that we don’t need to add to it.
Because as bad as brain rot is, soul rot is worse. And a hate-laced, click-bait habit will inevitably turn your soul into the picture of Dorian Gray. Don’t go there.
And those are my myriad thoughts. Help me sort them out in the comments.
Well said, Jim, and thank you for emphasizing not to lose our soul over AI.
You are quite welcome, Grant. It is the major issue of our time.
Jim, you nailed the core issue. The repercussions and consequences stem from mindlessness, atrophy, brain rot, inability to think.
Recently I saw a family of four at a restaurant, parents, a boy about 10 and a girl about eight. As they ate, they talked with one another. At one point, the girl got kind of bored with adult conversation and started looking around at other tables, people watching. She caught my eye and smiled. The boy was absorbed in—get this!—an actual physical book, eyes moving across pages, focused, engaged.
Their young brains were working, absorbing, interested, learning. You could see it in their eyes, unlike the blank, zombie stare of too many kids.
Such a small moment but they gave me hope.
These hopeful examples need to grow into a movement, Debbie, before it’s too late. I do love seeing young people with a physical book.
Thanks for sharing that uplifting story! An observation like that is the exception not the rule, and wonderful to hear.
It is frustrating to note that “HAL” from “2001: A Space Odyssey” is alive and well to encourage and assist the Human Race in its devolvement to mindless lemmings. It is also frustrating to note that the thinking population is helpless to stop it. I don’t relish living in a world of human bots. Perhaps a new platform directed to those who enjoy the freedom of being human with all our flaws will arise giving the thinking population a place to go.
There used to be places like that– church, community, clubs…all face to face. Shocking!
Thanks for the shout-out, JSB. You’ve brought up points I didn’t delve into in my post, where I focused on the implications for authors.
I don’t think using AI for basic research is a terrible thing. Using it to create? That’s a definite no. I will say that my book club often relies on AI to come up with discussion questions for the book we’re reading if the author hasn’t provided their own at the end of the book. (Common in “book club fiction,” not so much in other genres.)
Is making things too easy going to result in a generation of non-thinkers? Are our brains going to atrophy? Scary thoughts. I wonder how Mr. Holtby, my high school English teacher, who had us analyzing fiction, would have handled this. My guess, is he’d have us analyzing the AI commentary and there would be some good discussions.
It is indeed powerful for research. What would normally take days with physical books, or perhaps hours with Google and the like, AI handles in seconds. As long as we don’t rely on all the results, because of hallucinations, it can be very helpful in that regard. But the overall cost for this is quite high. And I’m not talking dollars.
All excellent points, JSB. And as a side note, I highly recommend watching the recent HBO documentary: “Mel Brooks: The 99 Year Old Man.” It’s a comedy treasure trove. The man’s ego is immense, but it’s so worth it to watch. Especially to see a living 99-year-old man whose brain hasn’t lost a beat. May we all be so lucky.
I have long held that those old school comedians, who exercised their comedic chops everyday, even in private, overwhelmingly show healthy brains right up to the end. George Burns, Brooks and Reiner, Bob Hope, Groucho. Use it or lose it.
Outsourcing our thinking and creativity to a program which is capable of neither is a mistake IMHO. It also robs us of the pleasures and challenges of both.
My issue with research is similar, in that we work our brains when doing the heavy lifting of sifting for information and make discoveries that take us in new, potentially unforeseen directions. I also feel that if I have to verify an AI answer to a research question, then I’m still doing research on my own, because AI create errors small and large, so why not just do that to begin with?
There’s a Garbage In, Garbage Out aspect to AI, but more than that, large language models generate answers based on assigned probabilities, so it seems to me creating errors is baked into GenAI.
Of course I have a degree I history and worked as a public librarian for 32 years, so there’s no school like the old school as far as I’m concerned 🙂
I do agree that contacting KDP customer service and politely expressing your concerns is the way to go.
Thanks for a thought provoking post.
I agree about doing original research, Dale. I differentiate spot research, when a certain detail is needed quickly. What I would normally call up an expert to talk about, if I had one!
How’s this for scary? I just read (from a reliable news source) about a new social platform that is just for AI, no humans needed, called Moltbook.
According to the article, “Moltbook, a project from Peter Steinberger, allows for AI agents to interact with each other without any human prompting. The machines can create posts, comment, and interact with one another, while humans can only observe their interactions.
The project has exploded online in recent days over some of the conversations from the machines, like the talks of creating an AI-only language.”
How close are we to things like Skynet and The Matrix?
Way too close. I’ve heard about that, too. Ray Bradbury would not be surprised.
🤯🤯🤯🤯
Made my brain explode too.
Soul rot. What an apt term. I wish people used a little self restraint nowadays because it’s so easy to respond negatively to anything we don’t like.
I agree with Terry about the use of AI. And I never thought about using it to do something I hate to do like create book questions
Good old self-restraint. Wouldn’t it be nice for that to make a comeback.
AI incursion is scary/concerning with regard to writing, but even moreso with regard to society in general. Can we expect to receive knowledgable/qualified services from any particular type of professional? Or instead of training to become a professional where they learn the tricks of their trade, what if their brains have been co-opted with AI so they can’t really problem solve or, GASP, interact with human beings and think independently to solve human problems.
I’m all for technological advancement, but with thoughtful boundaries and appropriate caution. What I’m NOT seeing is thoughtful boundaries and appropriate caution.
I hope sanity will prevail.
Sanity has to begin at home. I don’t think it’s healthy for kids, teens, or even some adults to be on social media at all.
Thanks for reminding us to stay alert, Jim. It’s shocking to me how quickly AI has become a part of our lives. I had a call from a doctor’s office recently to remind me to schedule a certain procedure. It took a minute to realize I wasn’t talking to a real human. I told the bot (politely, mind you) that I wouldn’t talk to it and hung up.
As scary as it is to know AI can create a realistic voice over the phone, there’s so much more. I fear for the generation who can’t solve problems without the help of AI. They’ll be missing out on one of life’s great pleasures.
I was thinking this article would mention “wide” publishing, but it didn’t. If you don’t like Amazon and what it is doing, there are alternatives. I publish widely through D2D, which distributes to all other digital outlets in addition to Amazon. There is also direct selling, which is becoming much more popular.
Since you ventured into AI, something I’ve always found suspicious, since publishing with Amazon is the loose language about what they can do with a book you distribute through them. I bring up the point that we have no idea how they trained the five AI systems they sell through Amazon Web Services. We all know what the other AI companies did, but nothing from Amazon.
Did they use the same pirated libraries, or did they just use what they had on hand? As a software engineer, I’ve read plenty of technical articles about AI training and degradation. One thing always mentioned was the “purity” of the training data. Training AI on non-vetted AI inputs degrades the AI. I suspect that is why the AI questions were added to the publishing process, because those of us familiar with Amazon Web Services and their internal processes know Amazon loves AI. Couple that with the degradation aspect, and it seems a valid conclusion that Amazon used books published through KDP to train their AIs.
I know I’ve mentioned this before, but it always seems to get lost in the mud. Shouldn’t authors who oppose the unethical use of their IP be concerned about this? Where are the demands for answers if their IP was used by Amazon? If there is a valid suspicion, then shouldn’t authors be boycotting publishing with Amazon? Did I miss the Authors Guild seeking answers?
While “Ask the Book” is a concern, the greater atrocity would be Amazon using KDP to train their AIs. That’s bigger than Chat, Claude, and Facebook combined.