The literary prize winner most prestigious of Japanan author named Rie Kudangenerated a stir after acknowledging that about 5% of his novel had been written with ChatGPTthe now famous artificial intelligence tool that, according to her, allowed her to unleash her creative potential.
The controversy over the role of AI in literature is a complex debate with no easy answer. However, it is a debate that is set to grow in the coming years, as AI continues to develop.
The Open AI Class Action Lawsuit
A few months ago, a group of 9,000 authors including Jonathan Franzen, John Grisham and George RR Martin, presented a class action lawsuit against Open Ai, the company that originated the ChatGPTunder the accusation of having used without consent their works to train their chatbot programs and help them generate creative texts. In an opposite operation, the writer Rie Kurdan now acknowledged having used the automatic writing program to stimulate her imagination.
The controversial confession of the author who wrote with ChatGPT
The author’s confession It occurred during the award ceremony for one of Japan’s most prestigious literary awards, the Akutagawa Awardwhen she revealed that her winning novel, “Tokyo’s Sympathy Tower” had been written with the help of artificial intelligence program (AI).
image.png
Kudan explained that he used to talk frequently with the AI and that he he confided his most intimate thoughtsand that the ChatGPT answers They inspired some dialogues in his novel.
What Rie Kudan’s work is about
The Kudan’s workpraised by the judges as “flawless”, takes place in a futuristic Tokyo with AI as a recurring theme where the two protagonists are located: on the one hand, Sara Makina, an architect who builds a tower in a Tokyo park designed to offer a place where criminals are rehabilitated and explores his discomfort with society’s tolerance for those who break the law. On the other hand, Takuto, a young man who writes his biography, as he points out. AFP.
During his confession, the author33 years old She didn’t seem sorry or upset.. “I made active use of generative AI like ChatGPT when writing this book,” he said. “I would say that about five percent of the book quoted AI-generated sentences verbatim.”
Kudan said he turned to ChatGPT to help imitate the way “soft and confusing words” They distort ideas about justice. And he expanded: “In recent years, we find ourselves in a situation where words have expanded without limit and have allowed unlimited interpretations,” Kudan said after his award, as quoted by the English media The Times UK. And she added: “I want to use words carefully and think about the positive and negative aspects of language,” declared the 33-year-old author.
image.png

The jury’s response
The members of the jury they stated that “hard to find fault” in the winning work. One of the committee members, Shuichi Yoshida, even said: “It is a very entertaining and interesting work, which sparks a debate about how to consider it.”
Outside of his literary work, Kudan often plays with AI and uses technology to share thoughts that “you can never talk about with anyone else.” Apparently, admitting that he used it in his writing was not one of them. The author added that she hopes to maintain “good relationships” with technology and use it to “unleash my creativity” in the future, according to her AFP.
AI, new threat for writers?
The answer to this question depends on the definition of “replace.” If you consider that AI can replace human writerss in its entirety, then the answer is no. Human writers will still be needed to create works of literature that are unique, original and significant.
However, it is possible that AI can replace human writers in some specific tasks, such as writing news articles or creating scripts. In these cases, AI could be more efficient and productive than human writers.
In general, it is likely that AI and human writers coexist in the future. AI could help human writers improve their creativity and productivity, but it couldn’t completely replace them.
Source: Ambito