Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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My two cents? Sure. I'll be that hipster in the original post. I've never used it, never will use it. I don't think it should be banned, but you'll never catch me at it. Writing is self-expression, and personally I'd rather write with somebody sporting less-than-perfect writing skills than with a computer.

Obvious caveat, I'll be the last one to tell anybody else what to do. This is your hobby, your free time, one should write in whatever fashion one wants. Doesn't mean I'll ever understand the mindset personally.

TL;DR agree pretty much entirely with Jonyna Si Jonyna Si , who articulated my thoughts pretty much to the letter better than I have here.
 
I use it as a grammar check and research tool, since I do use semi-realism in my analogies and explanations. (One notable example was when I described a five strike technique for a post and it managed to catch that I only stated four body parts that were struck in the next sentence. Very handy in catching minute inconsistencies)

Its also a good way to bounce ideas off. There have been many times where I asked it if it was plausible to do something in a post and it has shut me down. This was definitely for the better given the content I write and where I get my inspirations from. ("Hey chatgpt, would it be too absurd if I had Drystan shift his brain to avoid a blaster bolt going through his skull? Oh ok but what if I said I used the FORCE? Oh ok.")

I don't think strictly AI generated outputs for me are useful since I tend to write really wild stuff in my posts. For example, catching lightning bolts in a storm with your lightsaber to amplify your attack, or doing a 0-inch punch to shatter someone's helmet and knock them out, (Yes Drystan did these, yes I know its based.)

Another example was when I was talking about how babies use imitation to learn about their surroundings and made the connection that Drystan was a big baby for continuing to rely on imitation. (This is the tldr, but I don't think AI would have been able to make that connection for me and inject it into a post if i asked it to.)

As for other people using it. I don't really care. As long as your posts are coherent and interesting to read, you're cool with me. (This also applies to just posts in general)

(Side Note: I thought the "Stars" thing was an actual in-universe expression since I've seen it used here and there so I started including it to be more immersive in my character's dialogue. LOL)
 
I've noticed the same patterns in other posts, but I hold nothing against them as I likely have used ChatGPT as more of a crutch than they have.

I do not considered myself a writer.

I joined as an outsider to the hobby from a tabletop roleplaying / tangentially related theater background. AI usage has made this hobby accessible for me, and ultimately lowers the barrier of entry for more people, at the cost of the issues others have mentioned.

I post exclusively from my phone, and have no text based/forum writing RP experience before chaos.
I've created tone and style documents from my samples to feed to each AI chat, have chatGPT project folders separated by character, and even used the deep research function to search the Wookiepedia for existing precedent. I've bounced ideas off of ChatGPT to consider different angles of an idea that I felt was stale. I've used it to format BBCode and divs, asked it about etiquette in hyper specific instances, and yes, fell back on it when I felt I had nothing to contribute to a thread that was held up by me.

Also, Em-dashes on mobile are just holding down "-" on the keyboard and selecting like you would an accent mark, so I will continue to shamelessly use them.

Also I'm with Drystan Creed Drystan Creed on the Stars thing I thought it was a canon thing from seeing it around.

It's easier for me to modify what I know I don't like than to start from a blank page.
It's more like giving loose stage directions and refining the actor's instinct on their first take. I'm not clever with wordplay. I usually have a bullet point list of what I want to see in a post, along with what emotional train of thought the character is experiencing, or a certain vibe I want to convey and don't have the words to do so.

I do feel like a fraud when my writing is complemented, but my focus is more on developing each character's vibe than individual posts.

Yes, the time spent setting up the prompts, editing, and refining could be used to simply write the post — but I am not a writing enthusiast, just an amateur roleplayer with intermittent downtime with my job and a mobile connection. I ultimately just have a gut feeling for how I want to respond and use AI to put it to words refine that feeling into something that hopefully conveys the emotional intent to the reader.

I don't blame others for using it as a tool or crutch, and I don't hold it against them if they don't want to 'RP with a chatbot'. I just simply could not participate without these tools, and can only hope that I have given each character enough thought and care in editing and prompting that—even if I'm not writing the specific prose of every part of my posts—the core of the character is preserved in the final delivery.

Afterthought Edit: Another thing – after editing everything to my liking, I will provide the "final draft" to the AI so it receives feedback on what I personally choose to omit/add/modify from what it drafted.
 
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Spitfire Soul, Heart of Gold
All that said - you can pry my em dashes and sets of three from my cold, dead, clammy hands.
This. 100%
I used to use normal dashes in the same way I use em dashes now until I learned I could easily find the em dash on mobile (which is what I mostly use because it's easier for me).


Here's my issue:
Yes, I can tell when other people use AI to write whole posts half the time. The other half I have no idea.

What makes it worse is that what people consider 'instantly AI' is literally how I've been writing my posts since 2017, long before I ever joined Chaos. I even started putting some of my hand written posts through an AI detector to see what it would say, and I was getting told for some of them that 35% of my post or more was "likely made by AI" and seeing that wrecked me. Not because I hate AI, I have a whole philosophy on it that I don't need to yap about right now, simply because of the fear that I might be seen as a cheater for doing the same types of patterns I've used for years, that I love useing, and worked so hard to develop well.

There is no foolproof way of finding out if something is AI. The idea of having what I put so much energy into that I can barely manage 2-5 posts in a day because I choose not to rely on AI to do more than grammar check me (I have dyslexia and my grammar is atrocious if I don’t put it through something) or get me over a really bad block by suggesting different paths forward reported on the regular because of that makes me so scared and kills so much of my joy.

I've seen what people are doing to artists who even have a smidge of what people have dubbed "AI style", so many of whom prove time and time again that they painted the thing just to keep getting hate and reported and so much else.

If that were to start to happen here, I would leave. Full stop. Because at that point, it's not the game I love anymore.

HOWEVER, I also tend to get disheartened when something I see in response to my posts follows a formatting pattern that I just don't find preferable myself. I have no idea if that pattern would be considered AI, but that being said I don't think we can blame AI for it. No one is going to like absolutely everyones style of writing, and it's perfectly okay to not write with those who's style is antithetical to what you like to read/need to see to be able to keep your joy going while still having respect for the other writer and their choices.

What is not okay is pulling out the "I don't like that style so it has to be AI and now I hate it AND have no respect for you" excuse because the only thing that will do is devolve into groups of bullies and posts reported/people banned who never even did anything wrong.


Anyway, that's my thoughts on it.

Edit: I too started using 'stars' as a replacement for certain words cause I got tired of the site automatically changing the curse I actually had there into something else when I didn't have time to come up with something better to replace it. I thought it was a good in universe replacement for when I need something in a pinch when I saw it used and I don't plan on stopping.

(I didn't put this one through a grammar check, so pardon me if my spelling mistakes are all over)
 
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Uhhhh... Has nobody ever watched The Terminator?

Jokes aside, I am not a fan of AI in creative spaces. Especially in creative community spaces! If you're on Chaos, you have community. Need a soundboard for your ideas? Chaos. Need help writing a post? Chaos. Need another descriptive word for your character? Chaos and/or a thesaurus. We don't need AI when we have each other. If you don't know that, I'm here to tell you.

If you know me, you know that I am very understanding, giving, and easygoing. This is one of the few hard stances I've ever taken in my life. If you're going to use AI to write a story with me, please don't. I likely won't know if you do, but regardless I don't want to write with you if you're going to do that. If you have, I still love you. To each their own. Don't let me tell you what to do. Just please keep it far away from me.

In my eyes, AI generation is mostly theft. That is why I do my writing without it. Sometimes it sucks, other times its amazing. Sometimes folks will be waiting two-plus-weeks for my response and that is okay. That's life, we are only human, and this is just one of our very amazing hobbies which we are all already happy to be here for.

I could say so much more since AI is such an inescapable presence on the internet right now, but I won't because it's late and it'll make me big sad.

Just let me leave you with one thing. Next time you use AI for something just ask yourself "Do I need to use AI for this?" "Is this theft of someone's writing, art, image, voice?" "Is it worth the impact it'll have on the environment?" If the answers to these questions don't sit right with you? Good! Find another way, and remember I am always down to help you find it!

This is a creative writing community. Let's help each other with all of that and more.

I am here for you. If nobody else is here for you, I am here for you.

That said, Goodnight. I appreciate you all!
 
Sometimes it is insecurity over ability, feeling like you are not giving to the other as good as you are getting.
I think this is 100% convenience. I suffer from imposter syndrome, and I don't use AI, so I think it's people wanting nothing more than to take the easy route.

Like, I get it. It sucks to be bad at something and feel inferior to those around you.

But, if watching media has taught me anything:

jake-the-dog-sucking-is-the-first-step-to-being-good-at-something.gif


We all sucked at one point. We all got better. You can too, you just need to put in the work.

THAT SAID,

I do take umbrage with another thing in that sentence.

Can we stop pushing this idea that if my writing partner drops a novel in my lap, I have to respond in kind? Sometimes, especially with my bipolar depression, I just wanna pump out a few sentences and call it a day. Sometimes, I don't have a lot to say. I understand it doesn't give you a lot to work with, but I'm sorry, not everyone wants to write War and Peace every post.

I came from chatroom RP, where you had 1000 characters per post as a limit. As a result, my writing style is very to the point. I don't do a lot of flowery description, because I'm going in the script writing, and because I read comic books. My inspirations, the media I consume, it's all very low on purple prose.

I'm sorry if I can't match your speed if that's your vibe, but I don't really care to. I write how I wanna write.
 
I was under the impression that anything you feed into an LLM is used to train it? I would love to hear from any folks who have experience with this!

By default, everything that's fed into popular LLM services is used for training. The policy may differ per provider, but a rule of thumb is that it's an opt-out privacy setting. You need to manually disable data collection (GPT: Settings -> Data Controls -> Toggle off 'Improve the Model for everyone'), and then pray it's not just placebo, really.

Scraping, i.e. collecting data from other websites, is also a widespread practice by LLM providers, though that's a different can of worms.
 
I have specific AI use cases but nothing to do with writing, and I keep it that way. One of the biggest reasons is I really want to work to be a better writer, professionally and creatively, and I think there's a good chance it would get in my way. (Example, example (pdf))

Wow, thank you for linking these papers. The abstracts alone are making me go down a small rabbit hole on this topic. I've been pretty preoccupied with the technical side to the point where the impact on knowledge work has been mainly peripheral, so these make for a fascinating read.
 
I like grammarly. Sometimes brain tired so it’s nice to just slap shit in a doc and grammarly or even word to be like “lol ur spell bad”

I've used grammerly for my posts for the longest time when I transitioned from GDocs to it so I could sneak posts while at work without it being blatent (Since I also use Grammarly for formatting email communications and the like). It just helps keep things in line and sometimes I don’t even accept all the recommendations on grammar placement because it just doesn’t flow right. I think that's cause I try to purposefully write in different styles, tones, manerisums and the like for my characters; with Danger, Zaiya and now Sibylla being my most prominent ones folk see now a days.

But Grammarly has also added new resources to help you improve your writing as well, which has been neat to explore, especially when I can just click the thesaurus and it gives me a neat list of synonyms to use then and there rather than digging through the book itself.

Either way, if someone wants to use a resource to enhance their writing, fine by me. I know there are lots of folks who are not aware of the little bits of Star Wars lore or references that require a deep dive into Wookiepedia in the categories neat Star Wars environment, materials, or planetary info to get some context or reference a creature to twist a modern idiom into a star wars one. Or my fav, star wars food, and drinks among others found in the consumables category. But I also know that while reference pop out of my head from writing in star wars so long, but that may not be the same to someone barely starting it now.

But that’s also why I still like sharing neat lists and categories for use whenever someone asks me on whats something in star wars would be. So for anyone using stars out there as a curse word, well, it is on the Wookieepedia's List of Phrases and Slang, so don't feel bad for using it. I posted references to a version of the same list Star Wars Insults and Expletives -- Learn How to Curse in the Star Wars Universe pinned on this writing forum back in 2014 and recommended anyone to use for neat cursing flavor. And certainly, I’ve seen many folks use the "--" dash for years, although I didn't realize that there are apparently three different types of dashes in reading this thread. I use them a lot in my tenure writing as "--" and will continue to do so when it feels right, lol.

All that to say -- write however you enjoy writing, with whatever resources you want to use. Do super lengthy confusing posts make my eyes glaze, yes -- but I also know I can get into my feels and write super long as well so, pot to the kettle. At the end of the day for me, I just enjoy getting char dev and making connections oocly here for rp plots.
 
Spitfire Soul, Heart of Gold
So for anyone using stars out there as a curse word, well, it is on the Wookieepedia's List of Phrases and Slang, so don't feel bad for using it.
That's literally where I found it the first time cause you sent me that very list to look at when my dumb brain couldn't think of a better way to say "that's gonna hurt like a b**ch" and get my point across without the site cleansing it to "queen" xD

But seriously, I don't plan on changing how I do my writing because people see my em dashes or sets of three or out of the box descriptions and start to decide to assume I'm using AI when I'm not. I think it's kind of stupid to change everything about how you like to do your writing just to avoid accusations because that in of itself also sucks the soul out of it. It turns us against each other when we should be building each other up instead of tearing each other down.

At the end of the day, AI mimics what literary devices are popular and liked, and imitation is the sincerist form of flattery. It shouldn't be a sign that we need to change because if we start to change that just to differentiate ourselves then the AI will also adapt to also follow that new pattern of what is found to be most popular. We'll be in this position of constantly having to cycle through how we do things which, for someone who is auDHD and dyslexic and struggles with having to frequently change routines/prefers consistency in patterns, really kind of sucks

(Edit: god this is a primary example of why I use stuff like quillbot to correct my typos and grammar in my thread posts, I found 5 typos and letter switcheroos in just one reread after posting this)
 
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[IMG alt="Makai Dashiell"]https://www.starwarsrp.net/data/avatars/s/0/770.jpg?1718980986[/IMG] Makai Dashiell - One reason could be so that you can be a part of the community. There is a lot of pull to the OOC aspect of this place. There are reasons and answers. It is not as cut and dry as you would think
We all sucked at one point. We all got better. You can too, you just need to put in the work.

This is something I've been thinking about since it was brought up.

When I first started roleplaying, some of the communities were harsh, even downright mocking of my poor writing. It made me want to find a way to fit in, to feel like I was a good writer. In ye olde days, your only choice was to improve your writing skills.

I don't want to fall into the old guard habit of I suffered so you should too, nor do I want to encourage reliance on a bot for writing.

But, I think I understand the appeal of AI a little better now.

Had AI been available when I was a brand new baby writer and struggling to keep up with those around me, I can't say for certain that I wouldn't have used it. Chaos has a robust community aspect and it's normal for people to want to find their place and be accepted.

While I value authentic writing and believe that writers who are unsatisfied with their own skills should work to improve them, I understand the urge to feel included. If someone uses AI to write their posts, it's up to them to decide if the shortcut is worth it.

Side note: I don't really consider spelling or grammar editing tools the same way as I do using a bot to generate posts. Apologies to my elementary school teachers, but some of those lessons were unable to stick definitively to the walls of my smooth brain.
 
I have a very simple measurement when it comes this topic.

Do I enjoy writing with you?

If I enjoy writing with you? I don't care how you do it, AI or human.

Do I not enjoy writing with you? Then I won't write with you in the future, AI or human.

All that said - you can pry my em dashes and sets of three from my cold, dead, clammy hands.

I like grammarly. Sometimes brain tired so it’s nice to just slap shit in a doc and grammarly or even word to be like “lol ur spell bad”

This was what I had in mind when I said I don't like these type of conversations. There will be some on this board who will want AI posts to be banned and those people also tend to be the types who scrutinize other peoples posts which leads to false positives and drama.

^These are my hills, I will die on them.
 
Spitfire Soul, Heart of Gold
Don't mind me as I keep yapping, this is just a topic that is rather important to me in the long run.

When I first started roleplaying, some of the communities were harsh, even downright mocking of my poor writing. It made me want to find a way to fit in, to feel like I was a good writer. In ye olde days, your only choice was to improve your writing skills.
I guess I got lucky because this wasn't something I had to deal with when I first started.

But that was probably in 2009, I was around 12 years old, and stumbled into post rp by accident through a friend I made in chat games. The site we went to had such a variety of people from all sorts of style, length, and format preferences and I went from using * insert action here *, to 1-4 sentences, and eventually to multiple paragraphs with a lot of encouragement and love from the people around. I firmly believe that I never would have gotten as good at writing in general as I eventually became without being able to learn and grow as I did in my early days of doing post rp (a long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away LOL)

It's sad to me that not everyone had the start that I did, but this isn't the first time I'm hearing about situations like that. I try so hard to be as encourageing and loving to new folks as was done to me when I was a beginner, and yet at the same time I understand that my posts can be intimidating to people who haven't yet had the time to learn and grow and I also don't have nearly the same amount of energy to rapid post like I did way back when.

Quick interjection:
That's something I can probably also attribute to the fact that I was so much more willing to post a single paragraph or two then rather than agonize over putting in detail and proper pros with perfect descriptor clarity... I'm working on challanging myself to vary my post length and help my brain to feel comfortable with the fact that I don't have to put 100% into every single post because of something I learned recently:

Sometimes, what we may consider to be 'barely adequate' by our stupid personal standards is actually brilliant as it is to the people around us. And even if it isn't, no one can possibly be their best every second of the day.

As TNB has told me many times now, "Embrace the short post!"

And if there are people in the community who didn't have that early start I had, who come here and see these massive posts regularly and don't know how or where to begin and feel they need to use things like AI in order to improve themselves, then who the hell am I to judge them for it? Instead, like Zaiya Ceti Zaiya Ceti said , maybe we should be more encouraging and provide them with resources that they can use to better their skills and not shame people for being beginners and relying on krutches to get that leap until they can run on their own. A little bit of encouragement and love goes so much farther than shame and fear, you know?
 
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I am only going to say this on my opinion of AI posting, and that is, I do not think that it can really be used to help improve your writing like people here are suggesting. Not in a way where it will meaningfully stick with you. But, that is just my opinion, and like butts, we all have one. Take it as you will, but I will use myself as an example.

I used to paint/draw quite often, but after becoming a mother I had less time and less desire to pull out my canvases, my paint brushes, and the rest of my art supplies, etc. when I had an infant who needed all of my time and attention. Even when I finally found the time for it again, I did not pick it back up because there were other avenues/places where I wanted to drop my creativity. Now, when I do try to paint/draw, etc. I do not have the same skills/abilities as before, that talent has atrophied. Can I get it back? Sure, but it's not going to be something I just pick up again.

A lot of the writers here have already had the chance to learn and grow on their own, before a computer came in to help improve their writing. This is not the same for new and/or beginning writers, who might need to make those mistakes and find their own voice/develop their own prose, without an algorithm telling them how to do that. Would you tell a child to write their book reports using AI? And let the machine do the work for them? Or would you want that child to do the research, so that these concepts/what they're learning sticks with them?

It is one thing to use AI as a tool, if you need help getting out of writers block and don't know where to take a thread next, maybe you need some ideas and your idea well has run dry... but another when it starts to take out the uniqueness and voices of the individual writers. It makes everyone the same, and their writing the same. Part of the joy of writing, for me, is getting to experience another persons imagination through what they write. I fear that is going to end up being taken away by the consistent use of AI.
 
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I have a confession to make to the community.
For the last few months, I have increasingly been using AI assistance in my posts.

To start with it was just a tool to keep track of busy group threads—what is everyone doing? How do I make sense of this mess? Are the any contradictions I—as a faction admin—need to address before moving on?

Then: it became a shortcut to getting out posts when I felt the pressure to keep up. Quick. Easy. Fast.

I could get a post out in twenty minutes, instead of an hour. My posts got longer. The analogies got weirder. And my characters all started saying, "Oh, my stars." Or, "Stars!"

Formatting was also weird.
And constantly having to be editted.
So it didn't look like my enter button was broken.

A beat.

I can say with all honesty that I only ever once posted something that was wholesale AI written. There was a rush to get something out to keep a group thread going, and I was heading away for a few days. The rest of the time I would spend a good 15 minutes writing the prompt—before spending another 5-10 minutes formatting. And then editing the post—especially the dialogue.

I was pumping out posts like the heat of the sun upon the earth. Hot. Heavy. Radiant.

Then the patterns started to fully unfold before my eyes. I could see—like a newborn foal—the world in a new light.

ChatGPT posts... Were everywhere.

At first I told myself this was OK. I mean. I am spending now about half an hour to refine this post to make sure that it is correct to the voice of my character, and does not have redundant statements... Who would need to have something repeated three ways, but in different words, or ramble on and on about the same subject... Only to start another line.

About the same subject.

A breath.

But for me it was still a revelatory moment—I was keeping up with faction threads for the first time ever on Chaos.

Then: it all began to feel different.

Posts were flying out the door with ease.

I was still loving the community that I was spending time with.

But, I felt an increasing disconnect with my stories and the characters writing opposite me.

Oh, sure, I was rewriting 90% of the dialogue. And editing out those telling em dashes. And making sure that it the post didn't overdo the sets of three. Seen. Every. Post.

OK, I am done imitating ChatGPT now. I will leave any spelling and grammatical errors. This way you will know that I agonisingly wrote in the telling ways of AI, but I did indeed write it.



It is time for the community to have a serious talk about AI assistance in Roleplay. We can brush it off like a snooty hipster with something akin to, "AI is for losers." But at the same time you have only posted once to that thread we started and that was over a month ago. In the meantime, I posted some threads that I (at the time) thoroughly enjoyed.

The connection, however, is waning. There is a disconnect from the soul and personality of the writer with their posts (mine included). People implement these tools because they are insecure about their writing, or afraid that they cannot keep up...or...they seek quantity of output as a tool to wield in some meta-game on the board.

Things like ChatGPT are here to stay. For one, the art from services like Midjourney were amazing, but the character consistency from ChatGPT/Sora is mindblowing. It is only going to get better. And the ability to tell the difference between a post written by a human and AI is going to become harder to parse. What an incredibly new world we are entering! It is exciting, but also scary.

The worst part of all are the compliments. "You are such a good writer." "That post was amazing." "I respect you because you are good at what you do here." I feel like a freaking fraud!

Now. To reiterate. (Heck, I am starting to write things like AI without even knowing it.) 499 out of 500 posts were made with me directly writing dialogue, determining all the actions and ideas within the post, I didn't just ask AI what to do and go with it. So, I could take some of the pat on the back because what was posted was my idea. But I still feel like a freaking fraud.

My grammar and spelling is not that perfect. I barely ever proofread my posts before posting them. And then all of a sudden it looks like I have spellcheck wired into my brain? Yeah. Right.

I don't know the answer. I know for me I have stopped enjoying RP. There is a certain soullessness to my output and to some of the things I receive. It is not completely devoid of soul. It is hard to put into words. There is though a sameness to a lot of posts. Walls of text. Em dashs everywhere. Redundant phrases. Emphasis words in sets of three. Analogies no human would use. Look who is being redundant now, as I make the same points.

For the most part, we are all serviceable writers on Chaos. In many cases, you are phenomenal writers. Do not be insecure in this, or your perceived weaknesses. We love writing with you. You are what makes this place special.

Anyway. I am the one to fall on my sword and acknowledge the IBM System 360 sized elephant in the room.

I am off to do some life recalibration and find my wannabe author's soul again.

-Bran

(Do not consider this post as a judgment on you or anyone you know. It is just time to have this discussion.)

I need eleven more words to make one-thousand words. There.
Wait what, em dash are a sign of AI??? I have been using them for AT LEAST five years when writing fictions, huh??

I've only ever used AI when spell checking and for my studies and I have never seen (I think not) a chat-gpt post. Is it really common? How do people even use AI? Do they just ask it to do everything?

I really don't get it tbh if someone could help me on that.

Though, it is very interesting that you talk about it, because as I mentioned in personally never used AI on Chaos to write for me and I never saw a post that way. (I did use it a bit when revamping my character to do some grammar check though, and occasionally to spell check my posts, because as thorough as I can be, English is my third language)

If it is becoming a big problem as you say then I genuinely think there should be some rules to it because AI is taking up a big place in day 2 day life, it's use even in such websites cannot be avoided and though it can be beneficial, if we don't make it a dependency.

Post scriptum edit –

I read up on a small article about em dash and how AI uses them.

I think I understand why it is categorized as AI writing. Models like chat-GPT 4 or Gemini 2.5 feed off of fanfictions/books who often use/used em dashes. It is horrifying to think that my work (which isn't all that good) is used to feed AI information and new tools.

I'll read more though it is a bit sickening, I am still surprised em dash and Oxford commas are a sign of AI, it is weird.

Post Post Scriptum edit –

On the topic of signs of AI writing I just saw that AI is becoming more and more human every day, I don't think we should ban AI posts if it becomes a problem because it's just gonna turn out like witch hunts all over again...

While on that, I do not use Oxford commas that much but em dashes are an integral part of my writing style and I hope I won't have to change my style from fear of being accused of using AI.
 
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Wait what, em dash are a sign of AI??? I have been using them for AT LEAST five years when writing fictions, huh??

When I have ChatGPT write bios for my D&D NPCs, it makes excessive use of em dashes. Here’s an example of a prompt I just gave it, and the bio it generated:

PROMPT: Write a two-paragraph bio for a wood elf ranger living in a city called Baldur's Gate
GENERATED TEXT: Tahlien Moonwhisper is a wood elf ranger who walks the uneasy line between the untamed wilds and the gritty stone streets of Baldur's Gate. Born in the dense canopy of the Reaching Woods—where the sun shines through like rays of pure energy—Tahlien was raised among the whispering leaves and sharp-eyed beasts of the forest. But as the threats to his homeland grew bolder—encroaching logging camps, twisted necromancers, and darker things from beyond—he followed the trouble back to the source: civilization. Now residing on the fringes of the Outer City, Tahlien uses his tracking skills, keen senses, and uncanny connection to nature to hunt the unnatural within the city's alleys, sewers, and shadows. Cloaked in greens and greys—mottled against the city itself—he moves as quietly through cobbled backstreets as he once did under moonlit boughs.

Though Tahlien distrusts the greed and corruption that flow through Baldur's Gate like runoff after a storm, he has found allies among the downtrodden and desperate. He offers his services as a guide, scout, or silent blade to those who share his sense of justice—or those who can pay well enough. Still, the wild calls to him. He spends his nights atop crumbling rooftops, listening to the wind off the sea and watching the stars beyond the smoke. In his heart, Tahlien knows he is a guardian of both the forest and the city, a lone sentinel caught between worlds—one who cannot be trusted.

If it is becoming a big problem as you say then I genuinely think there should be some rules to it because AI is taking up a big place in day 2 day life, it's use even in such websites cannot be avoided and though it can be beneficial, if we don't make

While I personally feel that AI-generated posts lack the creativity and special touch of human posts, I don’t think it’s something that could feasibly have a rule against it. How can you tell what posts are AI-generated and which ones are just people who like em dashes? Who’s going to moderate that?

You could run reported posts through an AI detector, you’re using AI to check for AI so we can crack down on AI.
 
Another example was when I was talking about how babies use imitation to learn about their surroundings and made the connection that Drystan was a big baby for continuing to rely on imitation. (This is the tldr, but I don't think AI would have been able to make that connection for me and inject it into a post if i asked it to.)


I relate to that, but I also relate to the fact that GPT has prevented me (especially in fight scenes in a thread w Serina Calis Serina Calis ) from doing something that Would be contradictory! Exemple : 'Hii ChatGPT, I'll copy you a post, can you tell me if there is any spelling or syntax mistake and tell me if the combat in this scene isn't possible or realistic at all in a star wars setting please?' (Yes, I do talk like that to chat gpt. BTW for context this was me doing a third check of my post before posting it to a thread, because I hate making mistakes sometimes)

Using AI is not all bad, and I won't judge anyone but fully generated replies are useless and create what we call in french 'culture of the void', rendering the RP useless.
 
This thread is going as about as I expected. Some are adamantly against AI usage. Some are OK with assisted posts. Some are OK with fully AI written posts.

This whole discussion is part of a broader societal reckoning that we are going to have whether we like it or not. AI options for art, writing, coding and more are now a part of our lives and there is not really a full understanding of where it will take us as a society.

I do really appreciate those links Jend-Ro Quill Jend-Ro Quill and the results so far do not surprise me at all. The internet has already rewired many brains from brains-that-know-things to brains-that-know-how-to-find-things. Unless the work is purposely put in, and knowing is valued as a concept, then people will just remember where they found the answer last time and how to get there again.

I can see the side of the argument that says, "We are just playing a game." In some ways it is akin to clicking a dialogue option in a Bioware game, and then just living with the wacky result that was nothing like the prompt suggested it would be. You can still have fun with the story, even if you are not completely in control of it. But I can't say that I am OK with this as my mindset.

Convenience sounds to harsh a word, but is probably a component of the issue. Personally, I have always struggled keeping up with larger faction threads. This has been such a known issue for me. I think I participated in 3-5 inter-faction threads prior to November last year, and that was since my registration in 2013 and the beginning of my consistent-ish posting in 2016. I was that private thread pal. But ChatGPT did help me quickly understand and comprehend what was going on, not just in my part of the story, but other people's parts of the story too. It really was eye opening. It enabled me not to just participate, but at times have multiple characters participating. For me, this is not just a convenience matter. It was a functionality issue. I couldn't participate like I wanted to without it.

Now, you might say that I should just not put so much pressure on myself to participate, or not worry if I am leaving people without a reply for a few days, but it does weigh on me. I do not like being the one that is holding up the story. It sucks. Anyway, that is my push back on the the 'it's purely out of convenience that people use it' argument. I think that is part of it, but not all of it.

You can probably tell that I am still quite conflicted on this issue. In one respect, it has enabled me to be involved like I always wanted to be. On the other hand, it has caused me to feel a bit disconnected emotionally from the role play.

I think in the end I will fall down on the side of: The struggle is what makes it worthwhile.

I would not want a rule against it AI posts. There is no way to tell properly. I do worry though that those implementing the AI tools will end up dominating the map game as they can post faster. Might already be happening! I can't tell, and I wouldn't accuse.

Side note:
Jonyna Si Jonyna Si - I am sure the Tolstoy posters wouldn't mind you waiting a day until you are in a better headspace to post a slightly longer reply that gave them something to work off. Despite my own anxiety over delaying the stories progression, I and 99% of the community are pretty understanding.
 
While I personally feel that AI-generated posts lack the creativity and special touch of human posts, I don’t think it’s something that could feasibly have a rule against it. How can you tell what posts are AI-generated and which ones are just people who like em dashes? Who’s going to moderate that?

You could run reported posts through an AI detector, you’re using AI to check for AI so we can crack down on AI.
I feel like I abuse em dashes (sometimes) and the AI writing that was generated by the prompt is eerily similar to my writing style in the first sentence of so, which terrifies me.

Also as I mentioned ai is becoming more and more human, and ai detectors aren't reliable at all as of a few months back

Example:

I spent two hours making an essay for my French teacher about Les Misérables, not even a few hours later the teacher mailed me to tell me it was AI generated.

My only saving grace is that I recorded myself while writing, I did not use an ounce of AI help in the essay. This whole incident was two weeks ago although I have read that detectors are unreliable, wtv I may have to do research.
 
This whole discussion is part of a broader societal reckoning that we are going to have whether we like it or not. AI options for art, writing, coding and more are now a part of our lives and there is not really a full understanding of where it will take us as a society.

To elaborate on that, the only form of AI I really use on the daily is for coding.

Because ask any devs and he'll you the same thing : "I'd rather kms than code in C++".

Ai has literally saved me hours of sleep because I couldn't find a fuckass compile or link error (I still have nightmares, send help.)

Most of my devs friends would agree if not all of them, perhaps the old heads wouldn't, but that's just a different upbringing.
 

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