Burger King gave candy to a worker has worked for more than 20 years.
The Whopper, which was first introduced in 1957, was a quarter-pound, oversized burger on a vast five-inch bun that cost a reasonable 29 cents.Large corporations can be cruel and uncaring. They often claim to care about their employees, but sometimes the reality can be quite different. This is the story of Kevin Ford, a cook and cashier at Burger King who had worked tirelessly for over two decades. To celebrate his remarkable feat of never taking a sick day, Burger King decided to shower him ...
Someone crashed the entire Onion market in America, made millions, walked away scott-free and starte…
We learnt that perfect monopoly can cause catastrophic damage to any economy, even the onion market.A tiny man who rocked America with Onions History doesn’t repeat, but it rhymes. You want to learn something, anything? Look back in history and it will surprise you just how eerily relevant it can be even in modern times. With the advent of Bitcoin, Cryptocurrencies, Tech titans and startups, you get all sorts of happenings like Tulip Mania, recessions, Feds stepping in, market manipulations a...
The youngest self-made billionaire just bought Forbes.
Austin Russell is an American entrepreneur, founder and CEO of Luminar Technologies. Luminar specializes in lidar and machine perception technologies, mainly used in autonomous cars. Luminar went public in December 2020, making him the world’s youngest self-made billionaire at the age of 25.Wha’s up with billionaires and news media? In a stunning turn of events, Austin Russell, the youngest self-made billionaire of 2021, has made headlines once again by acquiring a majority stake in Forbes ma...
CEO of StartupX | DeFi, NFT, Crypto, Web3.0 Builder | Co-Founder at IxSA | Director of Startup Weekend Singapore | Sustainability Champion
Burger King gave candy to a worker has worked for more than 20 years.
The Whopper, which was first introduced in 1957, was a quarter-pound, oversized burger on a vast five-inch bun that cost a reasonable 29 cents.Large corporations can be cruel and uncaring. They often claim to care about their employees, but sometimes the reality can be quite different. This is the story of Kevin Ford, a cook and cashier at Burger King who had worked tirelessly for over two decades. To celebrate his remarkable feat of never taking a sick day, Burger King decided to shower him ...
Someone crashed the entire Onion market in America, made millions, walked away scott-free and starte…
We learnt that perfect monopoly can cause catastrophic damage to any economy, even the onion market.A tiny man who rocked America with Onions History doesn’t repeat, but it rhymes. You want to learn something, anything? Look back in history and it will surprise you just how eerily relevant it can be even in modern times. With the advent of Bitcoin, Cryptocurrencies, Tech titans and startups, you get all sorts of happenings like Tulip Mania, recessions, Feds stepping in, market manipulations a...
The youngest self-made billionaire just bought Forbes.
Austin Russell is an American entrepreneur, founder and CEO of Luminar Technologies. Luminar specializes in lidar and machine perception technologies, mainly used in autonomous cars. Luminar went public in December 2020, making him the world’s youngest self-made billionaire at the age of 25.Wha’s up with billionaires and news media? In a stunning turn of events, Austin Russell, the youngest self-made billionaire of 2021, has made headlines once again by acquiring a majority stake in Forbes ma...
CEO of StartupX | DeFi, NFT, Crypto, Web3.0 Builder | Co-Founder at IxSA | Director of Startup Weekend Singapore | Sustainability Champion

Subscribe to Durwin

Subscribe to Durwin
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
<100 subscribers
<100 subscribers

AI generated books are flooding the market and you should be so afraid.
“Reuters found more than 200 e-books on Amazon’s Kindle Store that credit ChatGPT as either the author or a coauthor. But because Amazon doesn’t require authors to disclose the extent to which AI helped them write their books, the number could be much higher.”
“One author using bot assistance bragged that he churned out a 119-page novella in less than a day and could produce 300 similar books a year.”
I don’t blame the author.
He needs to make a living and it is hard trying to make it as a writer these days.
So good for him/her trying to game the system and stand out from the crowd.
But what these authors fails to see is that they might be able to churn out books rapidly in the short term and get perhaps a slight revenue bump.
But in the long run, if everyone collectively decides to use AI to mass produce eBooks, then the market will be flooded, and it will inevitably bring the value of such books down drastically.

They are trading short term individualistic wins for long term collective misery.
AI-generated books flooding the market can be bad because it may result in an oversaturation of low-quality books, making it harder for genuine authors to find work.
It is a real concern if AI-generated books are flooding the market.
With no concern over the quality and quantity inundating everyone.
Too much of a good thing, is a bad thing.
The use of AI in book writing could turn book writing into a commodity.
AI-generated books may lack the quality and uniqueness that human-written books can offer, and it may bring the value of books down drastically.

Yes, it has come to a point where AI is finally functional and able to be exact a specific advantage to our daily life.
But it may create a world where majority of the books you read are vapid and filled with robotic monotony.
Furthermore, with AI books flooding the market and the prices getting lower and lower, human-written books will soon become a rarity.
Writers will be left behind while their work is devalued due to an oversaturation of low-quality AI generated eBooks.
It could be hard to tell which is which in the future.

My prediction is that more and more people will get on the hype train.
Writing, books, website copy, art, design and many more industries will be invaded by generative AI.
That would only mean that the basic level of quality will be accomplished by AI.
95% of the content generated will be done or fulfilled by AI, which is still necessary and basic.
The top 5% of every industry, be it the top writers, top programmers, top artists of our generation will be the ones who mastered how to integrate the use of AI and still be true to their originality and creativity.
-
Would you buy a book generated by AI?
-
#startups #business #startupx #growth #success #socialmedia #culture #entrepreneurship #strategy #eth #btc #crypto #partnerships #bearmarket #NFT #lordoftherings #books #novels #generativeai #ai #artificialintelligence #aiart

AI generated books are flooding the market and you should be so afraid.
“Reuters found more than 200 e-books on Amazon’s Kindle Store that credit ChatGPT as either the author or a coauthor. But because Amazon doesn’t require authors to disclose the extent to which AI helped them write their books, the number could be much higher.”
“One author using bot assistance bragged that he churned out a 119-page novella in less than a day and could produce 300 similar books a year.”
I don’t blame the author.
He needs to make a living and it is hard trying to make it as a writer these days.
So good for him/her trying to game the system and stand out from the crowd.
But what these authors fails to see is that they might be able to churn out books rapidly in the short term and get perhaps a slight revenue bump.
But in the long run, if everyone collectively decides to use AI to mass produce eBooks, then the market will be flooded, and it will inevitably bring the value of such books down drastically.

They are trading short term individualistic wins for long term collective misery.
AI-generated books flooding the market can be bad because it may result in an oversaturation of low-quality books, making it harder for genuine authors to find work.
It is a real concern if AI-generated books are flooding the market.
With no concern over the quality and quantity inundating everyone.
Too much of a good thing, is a bad thing.
The use of AI in book writing could turn book writing into a commodity.
AI-generated books may lack the quality and uniqueness that human-written books can offer, and it may bring the value of books down drastically.

Yes, it has come to a point where AI is finally functional and able to be exact a specific advantage to our daily life.
But it may create a world where majority of the books you read are vapid and filled with robotic monotony.
Furthermore, with AI books flooding the market and the prices getting lower and lower, human-written books will soon become a rarity.
Writers will be left behind while their work is devalued due to an oversaturation of low-quality AI generated eBooks.
It could be hard to tell which is which in the future.

My prediction is that more and more people will get on the hype train.
Writing, books, website copy, art, design and many more industries will be invaded by generative AI.
That would only mean that the basic level of quality will be accomplished by AI.
95% of the content generated will be done or fulfilled by AI, which is still necessary and basic.
The top 5% of every industry, be it the top writers, top programmers, top artists of our generation will be the ones who mastered how to integrate the use of AI and still be true to their originality and creativity.
-
Would you buy a book generated by AI?
-
#startups #business #startupx #growth #success #socialmedia #culture #entrepreneurship #strategy #eth #btc #crypto #partnerships #bearmarket #NFT #lordoftherings #books #novels #generativeai #ai #artificialintelligence #aiart
No activity yet