• An addendum to Rule 3 regarding fan-translated works of things such as Web Novels has been made. Please see here for details.
  • We've issued a clarification on our policy on AI-generated work.
  • Our mod selection process has completed. Please welcome our new moderators.
  • Due to issues with external spam filters, QQ is currently unable to send any mail to Microsoft E-mail addresses. This includes any account at live.com, hotmail.com or msn.com. Signing up to the forum with one of these addresses will result in your verification E-mail never arriving. For best results, please use a different E-mail provider for your QQ address.
  • For prospective new members, a word of warning: don't use common names like Dennis, Simon, or Kenny if you decide to create an account. Spammers have used them all before you and gotten those names flagged in the anti-spam databases. Your account registration will be rejected because of it.
  • Since it has happened MULTIPLE times now, I want to be very clear about this. You do not get to abandon an account and create a new one. You do not get to pass an account to someone else and create a new one. If you do so anyway, you will be banned for creating sockpuppets.
  • Due to the actions of particularly persistent spammers and trolls, we will be banning disposable email addresses from today onward.
  • The rules regarding NSFW links have been updated. See here for details.

Making ai tags mandatory

Why don't you just turn it off? First thing I do upon getting a new computer.
I usually do, but I don't have a beta-reader so I try and use the proofreading option to at least look through for obvious typos, take a break, and return to read the story properly after a brief break, to catch any obvious typos before I post.

It doesn't always work, something slips past my checking, because I know how I wanted things to go, and I read it wrong, a mistake in my head turning to how I wanted it to be, and I don't catch it. Only to post, and then groan and edit later when a further look after a bit longer reveals "wait, that should be 'her' not 'him'" or something similar. I've also had some occasions with 'shirt' lacking the letter r in it, which doesn't trigger auto-correct, but definitely makes me feel embarrassed releasing a text that has such obvious mistakes in it still.

So its usually disabled, but writing stuff, and proof-reading et cetera, I do use the option to spot the obvious mistakes sometimes. Spelling error in some words can be noticed and corrected easily enough in such cases. I just dislike that instead of just underlining stuff in red, it still tries to rewrite when I edit the text.

I don't use Microsoft Word on casual writing, but LibreOffice, so occasional updates seem to catch me off guard when some option is back to how it 'should be' apparently.

Still, kind of veering a bit off-topic, but just figured making mistakes that awkward is something you expect more from a human author than an AI one, idle amusement. Humans and AI both make mistakes, just different sorts, and figure AI mistakes tend to be more a sampling of stories leading to weird things that shouldn't happen and don't make sense, resulting in odd stories in some attempts. Eh.
 
I usually do, but I don't have a beta-reader so I try and use the proofreading option to at least look through for obvious typos, take a break, and return to read the story properly after a brief break, to catch any obvious typos before I post.

It doesn't always work, something slips past my checking, because I know how I wanted things to go, and I read it wrong, a mistake in my head turning to how I wanted it to be, and I don't catch it. Only to post, and then groan and edit later when a further look after a bit longer reveals "wait, that should be 'her' not 'him'" or something similar. I've also had some occasions with 'shirt' lacking the letter r in it, which doesn't trigger auto-correct, but definitely makes me feel embarrassed releasing a text that has such obvious mistakes in it still.

So its usually disabled, but writing stuff, and proof-reading et cetera, I do use the option to spot the obvious mistakes sometimes. Spelling error in some words can be noticed and corrected easily enough in such cases. I just dislike that instead of just underlining stuff in red, it still tries to rewrite when I edit the text.

I don't use Microsoft Word on casual writing, but LibreOffice, so occasional updates seem to catch me off guard when some option is back to how it 'should be' apparently.

Still, kind of veering a bit off-topic, but just figured making mistakes that awkward is something you expect more from a human author than an AI one, idle amusement. Humans and AI both make mistakes, just different sorts, and figure AI mistakes tend to be more a sampling of stories leading to weird things that shouldn't happen and don't make sense, resulting in odd stories in some attempts. Eh.
Try using Grammarly, might work better than vanilla autocorrect for you.
 
I wanted a way to have review comments like on FictionLive. That would help a lot with this AI problem; I can't stand reading a door described in more than eight words anymore, nobody deserves to go through that.
 
I wanted a way to have review comments like on FictionLive. That would help a lot with this AI problem; I can't stand reading a door described in more than eight words anymore, nobody deserves to go through that.
The door was a very light reddish brown with gold accents.

Damn, depending on how you count it that's actually not eight words.
 
Try using Grammarly, might work better than vanilla autocorrect for you.
Amusing as the idea is, especially with the topic of this thread, I think I'll pass for now.

I'd sooner deal with the mistakes popping up now and then and having the auto-correct being troublesome till its switched back off again, than play around too much with AI.

I'll admit it is fun watching a friend make images with it, but I've personally felt little desire to play around with the AI tools.

Still, thanks for the suggestion, might have to look on it with some scrap bit of writing that doesn't matter too much to see how that works when visiting a friend who plays around more with the AI, but in general I just try and proofread my work myself after a pause, or have someone help beta-read something on occasion.
 
The door was a very light reddish brown with gold accents.

Damn, depending on how you count it that's actually not eight words.

I step closer and run a hand over the door. It's warm. Smooth, but not perfectly — there's a texture to the engravings. Like it's been handled before. Used. Not ancient, not new. Just… alive.
I thought 8 was a lot, but I realize now it's not that much. But counting, it's 24 words. And it's never just the door, it's a table, a wall, a tree, everything is important and needs a super mega detailed description.
 
I step closer and run a hand over the door. It's warm. Smooth, but not perfectly — there's a texture to the engravings. Like it's been handled before. Used. Not ancient, not new. Just… alive.
I thought 8 was a lot, but I realize now it's not that much. But counting, it's 24 words. And it's never just the door, it's a table, a wall, a tree, everything is important and needs a super mega detailed description.
I mean, given the words in that sentence that aren't involved in directly describing the door, it sounds like it's pretty important to the story and worthy of such a description.
 
I mean, given the words in that sentence that aren't involved in directly describing the door, it sounds like it's pretty important to the story and worthy of such a description.

It's just the room of requirement; the problem isn't just this specific case, but that almost everything is described this way. All AI stories are unnecessarily verbose.
 
If there's tension in the air, such as opening the door to the principal's office after being caught doing something, a possibility of serious consequences hanging in the air, the tension might be ramped up a bit, noticing all manner of things while mind is kind of panicking, looking for some distraction.

Just leaving a bathroom and closing the door behind you? Yeah, less words is necessary.

Figure it is a matter of context, and figure an AI defaults to being a bit more verbose even when its unnecessary?

Then again, I've also seen some people write excessive descriptions on things.

.... One story i recall reading, a long while back, was Naruto fan-fiction that was mostly okay but it had one 'weird' Jiraya (self proclaimed 'Super Pervert') as the POV, and it went for 2 entire paragraphs about Tsunade's breasts, and how they were a religious experience to behold, and trying to convince someone else that seeing them is believing. It was over the top and frankly ridiculous... and with Jiraya, it felt in character.

Too bad that story got the axe during some purges, I'd guess mainly because it also included some pretty raunchy sex-scenes in the story.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top