Authors call on publishers to limit their use of AI | TechCrunch

An open letter from authors together with Lauren Groff, Lev Grossman, R.F. Kuang, Dennis Lehane, and Geoffrey Maguire calls on ebook publishers to pledge to limit their use of AI instruments, for instance by committing to solely rent human audiobook narrators.

The letter argues that authors’ work has been “stolen” by AI corporations: “Somewhat than paying writers a small proportion of the cash our work makes for them, another person might be paid for a know-how constructed on our unpaid labor.”

Amongst different commitments, the authors call for publishers to “make a pledge that they’ll by no means launch books that have been created by machine” and “not substitute their human workers with AI instruments or degrade their positions into AI screens.”

Whereas the preliminary letter was signed by an already spectacular checklist of writers, NPR reports that one other 1,100 signatures have been added within the 24 hours after it was initially printed.

Authors are additionally suing tech corporations over utilizing their books to prepare AI fashions, however federal judges dealt important blows to these lawsuits earlier this week.