Euphony
(=_=)
- Joined
- Feb 1, 2012
- Posts
- 2,298
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Why don't we have a *drool* emoji?
Whoa! You're a filthy fucker!Talk gets any hotter up in here and somebody owes somebody $4.99 a minute.
Is that Leisure Suit Larry?Whoa! You're a filthy fucker!
Does anyone remember Larry the Lounge Lizard (something like that) a little pixelated character you had to navigate through a hookers bar? We played it endlessly during lunch breaks, back in 1988.
That's the one, but more like the original Pac-Man. No smooth renders at all. You could count the pixels. The only colour was in the characters, the rest of the screen was mostly black.Is that Leisure Suit Larry?
I'm not as decrepit so I'm more familiar with the Xbox reboot than the O.G.
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No, my understanding is that ChatGPT doesn't do erotic or sexual at all.
That makes me REALLY want to work at OpenAI now.
I promise to lower their market value considerably if I do work there.Oh, please, don't go there.
I asked it to write an erotic story in the style of Emily Miller of Literotica. It complained first about aping established authors (me? who knew?) and then about adult content.No, my understanding is that ChatGPT doesn't do erotic or sexual at all. It can be flirty but will skip over the event like old TV shows of the 50s and 60s. A few sites, with paid subscriptions might do sex, but they wouldn't do it well.
Same. Over in the other AI thread (no, the other one. No, the other other one), I gave a pretty detailed rundown of how I use the tools, which largely ends up being "thanks for the advice, now STFU." You can see it in detail at https://forum.literotica.com/threads/ai-allegations-thread.1599778/post-97969898 if anyone's curious.And this is why I ignore grammarly two thirds of the time. I have two rules that it breaks:
1. People DO NOT speak with perfect grammar. You can excuse it if they have a prepared speech before them, if they're reading from a prompt. When people talk with perfect grammar you feel unsettled because they feel less like people.
2. It can't get NUANCE... or the idea of other entities, it can't contain originality. I had to ignore its corrections quite often because it just did not get the message. It can't get that "The Genesis" does not refer to the biblical event, but to a SHIP, it can't get that a world is being used interchangeably with "planet", so when I say "on this world" it wants me to correct it to "in this world". Bruh, they ain't living underground.
But, often... it can give me some corrections on grammar. And much more often I tell it "you are wrong, robot".
Huh, and if what you say is correct, then I have been avoiding the AI detector because they would mark down my works with like 500 mistakes even though a person will see them as perfectly okay. If you OVERuse it and remove all of the "own", "actually" and take all its corrections... honestly, you deserve it. I have one GREAT example of why AI can be utterly wrong.
It wanted me to change those to "two fingers shoved into the oil". Truly, "they turned their thinking over to machines but that only allowed men with machines to rule over them".
I've reviewed your post. It's a rather subtle description, and you managed to bypass the filtering by steering clear of explicit words that would raise alarms.
You also acknowledged flooding the machine with numerous prompts,
indicating it wasn't genuinely generated by AI.
Essentially, you used the AI as a keyboard to compose your content.
I have one GREAT example of why AI can be utterly wrong.
It wanted me to change those to "two fingers shoved into the oil". Truly, "they turned their thinking over to machines but that only allowed men with machines to rule over them".
The AI has a point here. Not that its proposed solution is right (it isn't) but it's flagging a weakness in the writing.
People parse as they read, starting to interpret each sentence well before they've reached its end. But sometimes the beginning of a sentence is misleading or ambiguous, and then the reader may head off on an incorrect interpretation before reaching something that tells them they've misunderstood. Then they have to go back, forget their ideas about what the sentence was saying, and try again. That kind of stumble is better averted.
In this case, because "oil" can be either a noun or a verb and because authors don't always get it right on things like "in to"/"into" or "alot"/"a lot", "two fingers shoved in to oil" can be ambiguous. It'd be better to avoid that potential stumbling stone by recasting the sentence.
It's not a big thing, but it's worth trying to avoid it when you can.
For instance, unless there's some reason for using passive voice here, it could be changed to "[PersonName] retrieved the bottle of lube from their nightstand to apply liberally on cock and asshole, and shoved in two fingers to oil the inside as well." Alternately, changing "oil" to "lubricate" or just something like "take care" would work here.
Of course, I do. It's as clear as daylight, but you're never wrong, are you?
The percentage of words is irrelevant. You don't credit the dictionary for the words you find in it. The real question is: Who's telling the story?
For instance, if you give a single prompt asking for a 1500 word short story about some topic, the output will be considered AI-generated. But it will likely be far from intelligent, so you'll have to prompt it again and again until it gets closer to what you want. I know how hard it is to coax the desired result from these stubborn machines, but you learn to tame them.
Somewhere after the 20th prompt, it becomes your content!
For the same reason, you don't write with a quill on papyrus paper and send your stories with a carrier pigeon. It's a new era, and we're still adjusting.
If you were to go back in time and offer Ovid the use of your iPhone for writing, he'd look at you like you've lost your mind.
Of course, I do. It's as clear as daylight, but you're never wrong, are you?
The percentage of words is irrelevant. You don't credit the dictionary for the words you find in it. The real question is: Who's telling the story?
For instance, if you give a single prompt asking for a 1500 word short story about some topic, the output will be considered AI-generated. But it will likely be far from intelligent, so you'll have to prompt it again and again until it gets closer to what you want.
Somewhere after the 20th prompt, it becomes your content!
Is that what it looked like in colour? Back in the day we only had a monochrome monitor at home.This is the original Larry
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