Fred, this is a fascinating approach -- using a stable of LLMs together. I have to say, I've been heavily using AI as a writer's assistant, but I've been resisting using it as a full-on writing partner (except in my Substack conversations), because I feel like some kind of code of ethics needs to be established first. For example, should a writer have to disclose that they've used AI on a project?
Great to see you here. You’ve put your finger on a huge issue. My thought is that everyone should be transparent about their ai use. Not only can we get a sense of what we are all doing / learning but I think it will pave the way for writers to get paid when their work is used to train ai and then accessed by others.
Thanks for the note. Hope you’re enjoying the substack.
Claude is quite the workhorse. I've found one area where Claude is exceptional. Ask it for its favorite sentence in a draft, and why it chose that sentence, and it will return interesting and sometimes very useful comments, and its picks are often spot-on
Fred, this is a fascinating approach -- using a stable of LLMs together. I have to say, I've been heavily using AI as a writer's assistant, but I've been resisting using it as a full-on writing partner (except in my Substack conversations), because I feel like some kind of code of ethics needs to be established first. For example, should a writer have to disclose that they've used AI on a project?
Peter,
Great to see you here. You’ve put your finger on a huge issue. My thought is that everyone should be transparent about their ai use. Not only can we get a sense of what we are all doing / learning but I think it will pave the way for writers to get paid when their work is used to train ai and then accessed by others.
Thanks for the note. Hope you’re enjoying the substack.
Claude is quite the workhorse. I've found one area where Claude is exceptional. Ask it for its favorite sentence in a draft, and why it chose that sentence, and it will return interesting and sometimes very useful comments, and its picks are often spot-on
Great to know! Thanks, Morgan.