saxbrightwell: a transparent image of a saxifrage flower (Default)
Core Keeper

I took the last week off writing to explore the 1.0 patch of the game Core Keeper. ExpandMore about that... ) I got over my classic neurospicy fear that not doing something for a few days means I've completely forgotten how to do that thing (I get the same anxiety every time I have to return to work after a long weekend) and wrote a good chunk this morning. Back in the game, baby! Just in time to have another brutal week of work, but I've mentioned before how that seems to be, paradoxically, good for my writing output. Yeah, I don't think I'd do well trying to write as my only source of income XD

Draft2Digital Courting AI

I, like many others, was emailed a link to a survey where Draft2Digital was asking about writer and publisher attitudes towards an opt-in function to sell works hosted on D2D to scrapers to feed into the databases for Large Language Models (LLMs). The questions were mostly multiple-choice and heavily slanted to "how would you like us to do this?" as opposed to "should we do this at all?" with only two free-text boxes, which I used far more freely than they wanted me to.

Now, I'm aware this is a bit hypocritical of me, when I'm willing to use graphic models like Adobe Firefly (where the database was bought and paid for or legitimate public domain) and audio models like Google Play's digital audiobook utility (which provide serviceable text-to-speech for free but give nowhere near the value of a human reading), but I am not kindly disposed to text models. When they first emerged I thought they were quite interesting for how closely they appeared to imitate thought, and I couldn't bring myself to care about the idea they might be 0.00001% influenced by scraping my fanfic on AO3 any more than a human writer might be influenced the same way. Now, though, it's clear they were badly implemented from the get-go and have already half-destroyed the internet with their gibberish sludge output, just as the venture capitalist investment money is starting to run dry. Had LLM companies begun with an approach like, "We want to buy scraping rights to your book for $10,000" the landscape might look very different for them now, but they didn't do that, and it's too late to try to build that goodwill retroactively.

I'm very fond of D2D. They're the best aggregator in the field, with the widest reach and the most useable website. I've been quite happy with them. But this move was ominous. As others have said, if they're testing the waters in such a pre-slanted way, they're probably already in much, much deeper behind closed doors. I wish I could tell their decision-makers they're so late to the party that the more profitable business choice would be to loudly repudiate all association with LLM companies forever and guarantee none of their hosted works will ever be scraped. "100% AI-Free, Always" is already the attractor, and "nOw wiTh ai!!1! put glue and rocks on ur pizza!" the repellant.

Still, I will probably remain with D2D until/unless they eliminate the ability to opt out of scraping. Even the presence of an "opt in in exchange for a fee" function is something I would make my peace with in time - not compensating creators for feeding models is how these companies shat the bed in the first place. But the fee would have to be VERY high to tempt me to participate myself.

Parting Thoughts

One of the writer's Mastodon memes I participated in recently had the question this week, "If you could write a story in any fictional world, what would you choose?" This question landed a little differently for me, as a writer with their roots in fanfic; I already can write in any fictional world I choose, and have done so many times! But I realised, with great delight, that the world I want to write in most is mine: Sleipnir, that flashy ringed moon swiftly orbiting his vivid blue ice giant parent, Mama Loki. He's filling up with alien fauna, and OCs patiently (and not-so-patiently) waiting for their own novels once I finish with my OTP for a moment. But that's still a queue of 3 books away, and I only just got moving again on the first of those 3, book 4. So I'd better get back to work. Until next month!
saxbrightwell: a transparent image of a saxifrage flower (Default)
Frankly, I think improved text-to-speech capability is one of the BEST uses of AI technology. There is a lot more text out there than there are voice actors to read it all, much less funds to pay them. Certainly I can't afford to pay anyone unless I sell MANY more books than I have right now.

I considered the idea of recording my own voice, but I decided against that for several reasons. The first is simply a skill and resource issue: making voice recordings like that is something I've never done, and have none of the equipment for doing - I barely know what the equipment IS. (A microphone, obviously, and then The Magnus Archives extras said something about putting a sleeping bag over your head for sound quality? But what about all the rustling, and hyperventilation from excess CO2?) The second is a privacy issue: as I've said in the past, it's important to me to maintain a total pseudonym. A voice recording of myself would out my nationality and sex at minimum, and my whole identity to anyone who listened and somehow knew me in real life. So, "read by the author" is simply not an option (unless I, say, sold so many books I could afford to quit my dayjob - you may be noticing a common refrain here).

So, since I can't pay a voice actor, and both can't and won't record myself, audio versions of my books wouldn't exist at all without digital voices. In this instance no money is being WITHHELD from anyone; the technology enables something to exist where without it there would be nothing.

All this is to say that I've taken part in the Google Play Books auto-narration free beta test, and I'm very pleased with it. My first exploration of TTS voices was the app NaturalReader, which is useable but badly flawed. However, the Google voices can have their pronunciation corrected, which is a major game-changer. I still had to change certain incoherent noises (mostly sex noises) into words, because the models don't stretch so far as to be able to say things that aren't even made-up words. But overall, I found the voices very serviceable!

The audiobook series is here

Individually, Low Dawn is here: 
audiobook cover for Low Dawn

and High Dusk is here: 


If you're someone who benefits from audiobooks, I hope you enjoy these ones! Everyone deserves access to books, including books that are just for fun like these. Please remember to give the content warnings a listen and then arrange for an appropriate level of privacy!

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