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HUMAN-MACHINE WRITING AND THE ETHICS OF LANGUAGE MODELS
Author(s) -
Heidi A. McKee,
James E. Porter
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
aoir selected papers of internet research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2162-3317
DOI - 10.5210/spir.v2020i0.11277
Subject(s) - scripting language , narrative , computer science , presentation (obstetrics) , writing system , second language writing , field (mathematics) , world wide web , artificial intelligence , cognitive science , sociology , linguistics , psychology , literature , programming language , art , medicine , philosophy , mathematics , second language , pure mathematics , radiology
Our lives are intimately connected with networked writing machines. We write to, for, and with machines—and machines write to, for, and with us. Increasingly, much of what we read online is written by machines, such as the newswriting bot Heliograf, Persado’s marketing copy app, Narrative Science's GameChanger app, and chat and twitterbots too numerous to name. And our emails and other communications are often co-written with machine writing agents, such as Google’s Smart Compose, which suggests words, phrases and sentences for us to use.

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