Crossing the AI Rubicon

What one top literary magazine’s award to a (likely) AI-generated story means for the literary world

In 49 BCE, following a seven-year campaign to expand the Roman Empire into Gaul (much of Western Europe), Junius Caesar, then a general of the Roman army, approached a river that signified an important boundary between Rome and the rest of the world. According to Roman law, if anyone crossed that river–the Rubicon–it would be considered an act of war.

As we know from history, Caesar crossed that line, uttering the words alea iacta est (“the die is cast”), a phrase that has come to mean, “no turning back.”

Earlier this week, a prestigious literary magazine, Granta, crossed a metaphorical Rubicon of its own when it published a prize-winning short story that, evidence strongly suggests, was written not by a human, but by artificial intelligence.

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Humans vs. AI: Who’s winning the content wars?

How to we writers battle the AI machine?

This time of year, college students everywhere are playing the in-person role-playing game Humans vs. Zombies. It’s all in good fun, of course. But online, another competition, more foreboding to the future of content creation and the future of writers is taking place.

Call it Humans vs. AI. Like some mutant undead unleashed on civilization, artificial intelligence is threatening to cannibalize online content.

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