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Artificial intelligence is changing SEO faster than you think

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It may be time to add'novelist' to the list of professions under threat from super-smart computer software, because a short story authored by artificial intelligence has made it through to the latter stages of a literary competition in Japan.


The Day a Computer Wrote a Novel That Almost Won a Literary Competition - The New Stack

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Humankind shuddered once again as machines seemed to score yet another triumph in what had been an exclusively human arena. In case you missed it, last month an artificial intelligence (AI)-generated novel almost won a Japanese literary competition, inspiring awe, intrigue, and eventually skepticism. The new novel's plot "is essentially told from the subjective of an AI that becomes aware of its budding talents as a writer, and abandons its primary task of serving humanity," according to the "Motherboard" channel at Vice.com, and the Los Angeles Times, citing a report in The Japan News, even provided a translation of the novel's final thrilling sentence. "I writhed with joy, which I experienced for the first time, and kept writing with excitement. The day a computer wrote a novel. The computer, placing priority on the pursuit of its own joy, stopped working for humans."


Artificial intelligence harmless until proven dangerous

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With robotic research on the rise, the implementation of artificial intelligence is paving the way for robotic achievements. An AI passed the first round of a literary competition, begging the question, how safe are the creative arts? After an artificial intelligence software proved creative enough to -- with the help of humans -- pass the first round of a national Japanese literary competition, people have now become more afraid of AI. Of course, now AI has seeped into the arts, so there's no stopping them. We're going to be taken over by computers, right?


A novel written by AI passes the first round in a Japanese literary competition

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It may be time to add'novelist' to the list of professions under threat from super-smart computer software, because a short story authored by artificial intelligence has made it through to the latter stages of a literary competition in Japan. The AI software isn't self-aware enough to think up and submit its own work though (not yet, anyway) โ€“ the short-form novel was written with the help of a team of researchers from the Future University Hakodate in Japan. Human beings selected certain words and phrases to be used, and set up an overall framework for the story, before letting the software come up with the text itself. One of two submissions from the university made it through the first round of the Nikkei Shinichi Hoshi Literary Award ceremony โ€“ perhaps the entry's title, which translates as The Day A Computer Writes A Novel, should have been enough to tip the judges off โ€“ but the competition is unique in that it openly accepts entries from non-human writers (Shinichi Hoshi himself was a science-fiction author). Of 1,450 or so novels accepted this year, 11 were written with the involvement of AI programs, the Japan News reports.


AI-written novel passes first round of a literary competition

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The team, led by computer science professor Hitoshi Matsubara, collaborated closely with their digital construct during the writing process. The humans first assigned a gender to the protagonist and developed a rudimentary outline of the plot. They also assembled a list of words, phrases, and sentences to be included in the story. It was the AI's job to assemble these distinct assets into a unified text that wasn't just intelligible but compelling as well. The result was a novel entitled Konpyuta ga shosetsu wo kaku hi, or "The Day a Computer Writes a Novel", about an AI that abandons its responsibilities to humanity after recognizes its own talent for writing.


AI-written novel passes first round of a literary competition

Engadget

The team, led by computer science professor Hitoshi Matsubara, collaborated closely with their digital construct during the writing process. The humans first assigned a gender to the protagonist and developed a rudimentary outline of the plot. They also assembled a list of words, phrases, and sentences to be included in the story. It was the AI's job to assemble these distinct assets into a unified text that wasn't just intelligible but compelling as well. The result was a novel entitled Konpyuta ga shosetsu wo kaku hi, or "The Day a Computer Writes a Novel", about an AI that abandons its responsibilities to humanity after recognizes its own talent for writing.