"... during the hysterical, mawkish phase of a particularly bad breakup. 'Megan McArdle,' said Opus 4.7, after a few seconds of thought. Fascinated, I kept feeding it smaller and smaller passages to see how little prose it needed for identification. The answer, apparently, was 1,441 words."
Writes Megan McArdle, in "Will AI end anonymity? I tested it. Artificial intelligence can echolocate authors through their prose. Your digital fingerprint is at risk" (WaPo).

6 కామెంట్లు:
In college, I had a class where we had to write a passage in the style of Faulkner, Hemingway, and Fitzgerald. It was tough not to devolve into parody.
J.I.
Back in 1996, Joe Klein was outed as the author of "Primary Colors" because of a few characteristic phrases. You don't need AI if the human interest is substantial, and indeed, all the big authors are relatively easy to spot or satirize.
AI surely will out mid and low tier authors, and also distinct social media users. Some people are so intellectually generic that they'll hide behind "Smith", "Jones", and "Gonzales"-like ordinariness.
Says Jane Galt. I figured that one out myself before it was known. Her style is distinctive.
Unpublished fiction, as opposed to their fiction that gets published? Might have wanted to rethink that phrasing.
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