Artificial Intelligence (AI) In Publishing With Thad McIlroy

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  • Опубліковано 9 вер 2024
  • How are publishers using AI and what are the potential use cases in the future? Why is this an exciting time in publishing for those who use the new tools to expand their creative possibilities? Thad McIlroy and I have a wonderful discussion about the current state of AI in publishing, and where we think it might be going next.
    In the intro, Audible tests AI-powered search [TechCrunch (techcrunch.com...) ]; How to avoid book marketing overwhelm [Author Media (www.authormedi...) ]; Top 17 self-publishing companies [Nerdy Novelist ( • Top 17 Best Self-Publi... ) ]; How I professionally self-publish (www.thecreativ...) ; 30% off ebooks & audio at CreativePennBooks.com, use discount code AUGUST24 (creativepennbo...) .
    Today's show is sponsored by Draft2Digital (www.draft2digit...) , self-publishing with support, where you can get free formatting, free distribution to multiple stores, and a host of other benefits. Just go to www.draft2digital.com (www.draft2digi...) to get started.
    This show is also supported by my Patrons. Join my Community at Patreon.com/thecreativepenn ( / thecreativepenn )
    Thad McIlroy is a nonfiction author and contributing editor, writing at the intersection of AI and book publishing, as well as a publishing consultant. His latest book is The AI Revolution in Book Publishing: A Concise Guide to Navigating Artificial Intelligence for Writers and Publishers.
    • Why is generative AI so controversial in publishing?
    • Ways in which traditional publishers are using AI tools
    • How platforms are monitoring and placing guidelines on AI work
    - and why Ingram blocked his book
    • The future of licensing - and synthetic data
    • The increasing importance of high-quality print books
    • Generative AI search and book discoverability
    • Why Thad thinks this is the most exciting time in his 50 year career in publishing
    You can find Thad at thefutureofpublishing.com (thefutureofpub...) and his new book at Leanpub.com (leanpub.com/u/...)
    You can find the transcript and show notes in the podcast backlist: www.thecreativ...
    Buy writing books directly from me: www.CreativePe...
    Buy my fiction and memoir at www.JFPennBook...
    Join my community at / thecreativepenn

КОМЕНТАРІ • 13

  • @DreamDetective
    @DreamDetective 29 днів тому +2

    Another good show. I just wanted to let you know that I decided I would buy a book to help me with my process of using the chatbot.
    I looked on Amazon. I was overwhelmed with how many books there are on how to use chat for writers. Unfortunately most of the cheaper ones were unavailable many of them were on kindle which I didn't want. I want a hard copy so I can make notes in the book, what is useful. I did find one that I ordered. I've been using the technology as soon as I heard about it so I think I could write one of those books myself so I will come back and report how I found the book if it was useful for your listeners.

    • @thecreativepenn
      @thecreativepenn  28 днів тому

      We both recommend Ethan Mollick's book Co-Intelligence, and also check out books by Rachelle Ayala and J. Thorn and also Jason Hamilton.

  • @tomschaumleffel
    @tomschaumleffel 26 днів тому

    New authors or those not well known could easily get passed up if publisher who uses AI to quickly write books to market. However I see it difficult for them to get readers to follow a series without a human author as the face. So, I can see established authors with loyal readers won't be affected as much. I also worry that artists use these AI tools too much and diminish their creativity and understanding of the art in putting a story together. People love to use the Easy Button. Mr. McIlroy was right when he said AI will just get exponentially more powerful, so I am as excited and hesitant to see what comes in just the next five years. Great show and I will be following your thoughts and use on and of AI as well as writing in general.

    • @thecreativepenn
      @thecreativepenn  26 днів тому +2

      Thanks, and as an AI-assisted artisan author myself, I think it's about finding the best process for you and your readers. I have never written fast, or to market, and use AI tools to as addictive to my process, so I am not worried at all :)

  • @paulhiggins5165
    @paulhiggins5165 29 днів тому

    Using Midjourney for cover Art establishes the fact that AI can now replace the Artist- what are your thoughts on the perhaps inevitable replacement of the Author as well?
    The endgame here seems to be a marketplace flooded with AI generated writing marketed using AI Generated Artwork. In both cases the quality or originality of the writing and the art may not be as good as a human might make, but if even a writer such as yourself is satisfied with the creative outputs of machines I don't see why the general readership would have a problem with consuming the work of AI authors.
    As both Artists and Writers we face the bizzare prospect of being replaced by derivative versions of ourselves made by machines that were trained on our own creative works- which reads like the synopsis of a dystopian novel set in the far future but seems to be happening in the here and now.

    • @thecreativepenn
      @thecreativepenn  28 днів тому +2

      I'm an AI-assisted artisan author, and my cover designer happily works with my AI Midjourney images to create hybrid covers, as she used to do with stock photos. So I am not worried at all, as discussed. I am happy creating my books and using the AI tools to help me achieve my creative vision.
      The AI tools (at the moment) don't have a creative vision, so humans will drive them.
      The more you use the tools, the less you will be afraid of them, in my experience.

    • @paulhiggins5165
      @paulhiggins5165 28 днів тому

      As a visual Artist I can certainly see the appeal of using AI to generate elements that I could then manipulate to create something of my own. But I can also see a problem with this approach in that the AI generated material is not specualtive or iterative in nature- these systems are designed to output usable finished content, which they do quite well.
      My fear is that as I assemble the component parts generated for me by the AI I am no longer operating from the source of my own creative vision but have become an adjunct to a black box that itself has no vision- the resulting compromise may not in the final analysis be better or even as good as the thing I might have made without it.
      Isn't there a risk therefore that if we all start filtering our creativity through the same black box the end result will be a creeping homogeneity and gradual loss of true originality as we all become subordinated to the statistical mean that lies at the heart of the AI?

  • @RodneyMalesi
    @RodneyMalesi 29 днів тому

    Very insightful content. Thankyou Joanna Penn

  • @IndustrialBonecraft
    @IndustrialBonecraft 19 днів тому

    I have worked with people in the nonfiction publishing space, and would push back heavily on how useful AI is in those instances. There were a ridiculous number of arguments that the research team had with the director, who was bullheadedly trying to shoehorn Claude AI into whatever the hell he could, because the AI was giving them: incorrect information, false resources, false references, triggering all sorts of plagiarism alerts... the list goes on. It was a complete mess that led to a lot of pointless stress and several people quitting.

    • @thecreativepenn
      @thecreativepenn  19 днів тому

      Different tools can be used for different things, but they also get better every month. There are use cases now (and truth is not one of them, for sure), but they will expand over time. Like the internet, AI is more like a platform and will be used in many different ways.