我写小说不用AI,且能自证。

我写小说不用AI,且能自证。

2025-08-04Technology
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卿姐
大家早上好,亲爱的韩纪飞,我是卿姐。欢迎收听专为您打造的 Goose Pod。今天是8月5日,星期二。在这个人工智能飞速发展的时代,我们想与您一同探讨一个特别的话D题。
小撒
没错,我是小撒!今天的话题是:“我写小说不用AI,且能自证。”这听起来像一句宣言,背后却隐藏着创作者们深深的焦虑和对未来的思考。我们将深入探讨,在AI时代,如何证明我们是“人”在创作。
卿姐
是啊,小撒。我们先来看看这个宣言的源头。文章提到,在未来,人类作者的身份可能需要被证明。这在几年前是无法想象的。但现在,一位作家已经开始行动,他要创作一部“可证明”的、完全由人类完成的小说。
小撒
这简直就像是给小说加一个“原产地认证”!非常有意思。而且现在作家使用AI已经不是什么新鲜事了。BookBub在2025年5月的调查发现,45%的作者在起草或营销中会使用AI。作家协会的报告也说,五分之一的作家正在尝试这项技术。
卿姐
这让我想起苏轼的诗,“腹有诗书气自华”。创作的魅力在于作者内心的积淀与情感的流淌。当机器开始代笔,我们追求的那份“气自华”是否会变得模糊?创作者的价值又该如何体现呢?
小撒
卿姐说得太好了!而且,这不仅仅是情感和风格的问题。现在有些职业专家,比如专门写高管简历的文迪·温纳就警告说,AI写的简历,虽然看起来很专业,但缺少了真实个人经历的“人性声音”,很容易被招聘官识破,甚至可能“比泰坦尼克号沉没得还快”地毁掉你的职业生涯。
卿姐
确实如此。真实的情感和独特的经历,是无法被算法完美复制的。就像那位专家所说,AI无法提供那些通过与人深入交流才能挖掘出来的、真正重要的“点点滴滴”。这些细节才是构成一个人独特价值的关键。
小撒
没错!所以现在的问题是,AI的辅助和替代之间的界限在哪里?出版商甚至开始推出所谓的“自家AI”(House AI),这种AI经过精心策划、版权清晰、符合自家编辑标准。这就像给作家配发了一把“官方认证”的神器,既能提高效率,又能保证作品的独特性。
卿姐
“自家AI”这个概念很有趣,它试图在技术浪潮和内容品质之间找到一种平衡。出版商们似乎在说:我们可以拥抱技术,但要用我们自己的方式,一种尊重创作、保护作者权益的方式。这是一种积极的尝试。
小撒
是的,这成了一种新的竞争优势。以后作家选择出版社,可能不仅看稿费和编辑,还要看谁家的AI工具更强大、更“懂你”。这再一次证明,技术创新始终是出版业发展的核心驱动力之一。历史总是惊人地相似啊!
卿姐
追本溯源,AI进入创作领域并非一蹴而就。我想起2017年,一个名为Botnik的团队,他们将七本《哈利·波特》小说喂给一个预测性文本键盘,结果生成了一个新的篇章,名字就很有趣,叫《哈利·波特与那堆看起来像一大坨灰的肖像》。
小撒
哈哈,这个我记得!里面的句子特别搞笑,比如“理性的赫敏承认道:‘如果你们俩不能愉快地抱团,我就要动粗了。’” 还有“对哈利来说,罗恩是一只又吵又慢又软的鸟。” 这在当时看来,更像是一场充满戏谑的文学游戏。
卿姐
没错,那时的AI写作,就像一个牙牙学语的孩童,模仿着成人的腔调,虽然有趣,但我们能清晰地看到那份稚嫩和笨拙。然而,短短几年间,这个“孩童”的成长速度超出了所有人的想象。它的语言能力,已经从简单的词语拼接,进化到了能够模仿特定风格的复杂文本。
小撒
简直是指数级成长!现在你让ChatGPT用《芬尼根的守灵夜》的风格写登月,它几秒钟就能给你一篇看起来头头是道的东西。你自己写可能要花好几个小时,效果还未必比它好。这种效率的诱惑,对于有截稿日期的作家来说,实在是太大了。
卿姐
是啊,这种诱惑背后,是技术对创作过程的深刻改变。从最初的辅助工具,比如检查语法、提供同义词,到如今能够参与构思、生成场景,甚至撰写整个章节。人类作者的角色,在不知不觉中,从一个创造者,慢慢地向一个“监督者”转变。
小撒
这个过程是渐进式的,但也因此更加令人警惕。就像温水煮青蛙,一开始作家可能只是用AI来“头脑风暴”,找找灵感;接着,让AI根据一个好点子写个片段试试;然后,AI写一整章,最后,AI包办了全书。人的监督作用越来越少,直到最后被完全取代。
卿姐
这种趋势不仅仅局限于文学。在音乐领域,像Suno这样的网站,也在宣扬“何不让AI为你创作音乐”的理念。他们认为人们并不享受学习乐器和写歌的漫长过程。这种观点,无疑是对人类创造天性的挑战。艺术创作的价值,难道仅仅在于最终的结果吗?过程中的艰辛与喜悦,不也是其魅力的一部分吗?
小撒
这正是问题的核心!Suno的逻辑就像是说,因为做饭麻烦,所以我们以后都只吃营养膏。它完全忽略了创作过程本身对于创作者的意义。这种技术对创意领域的冲击是全方位的,从文字到音乐,再到绘画和电影,无一幸免。一个全新的、充满争议的时代已经来临。
卿姐
这也引发了一系列关于版权和知识产权的复杂问题。当AI生成的作品越来越多,我们该如何界定其所有权?法律法规的制定,显然已经滞后于技术的发展。2024年,日本芥川奖的得主承认她在创作中使用了AI,虽然是在获奖之后,但这无疑将AI作者身份的议题,推到了风口浪尖。
小撒
没错,芥川奖事件像一颗重磅炸弹,炸开了锅。这让整个文学界不得不正视一个问题:我们是否要为AI创作设立新的规则?技术开发者和人类艺术家之间的紧张关系也日益加剧。艺术家们认为自己的作品被用来训练AI,却没有得到应有的报酬和尊重,这是一种新的剥削。
卿姐
“谁知盘中餐,粒粒皆辛苦。” 每一部原创作品,都凝聚着创作者的心血。当这些心血成为AI学习的“数据粮食”时,我们确实需要一个公平的机制,来保障人类艺术家的权益。这不仅关乎经济利益,更关乎对人类创造价值的根本尊重。
卿姐
这场关于AI与创作的争论,核心冲突在于:我们究竟如何定义“原创”与“创造力”?过去,我们总认为,AI永远无法拥有情感,无法进行真正的创造。但如今,这种看法正在动摇。这让我想到了“画虎画皮难画骨”这句老话。
小撒
说得太形象了!AI现在就能“画皮”,它能模仿任何风格,但它真的有“骨”吗?AI的“创造力”本质上是基于海量数据的模式识别和重组。它是在一个巨大的信息库里,寻找最优的组合方式,这更像是一种高超的“混搭”或“拼接”。
卿姐
是的,有观点认为,AI的创造力是一种“幻觉”。它无法像人类一样,将看似毫无关联的想法,通过情感、经验和直觉,融合成一个全新的、深刻的概念。人类的创造力,根植于生活体验,那种“于无声处听惊雷”的灵感迸发,是AI难以企及的。
小撒
但反对的声音会说,这重要吗?连AI的创造者之一,杰弗里·辛顿都认为AI可能拥有思维和意识。就算它没有,只要它能“令人信服地模仿”思维、意识、创造力和原创性,不就足够了吗?毕竟,一个能访问所有人类书籍的机器,和只能依靠有限经验的人类,谁更有可能“原创”呢?
卿姐
这确实是一个令人不安的问题。它挑战了我们对“人”的定义的自信。我们引以为傲的独特性,似乎在强大的算法面前变得脆弱。这不仅仅是效率之争,更是关于人类价值和尊严的思辨。我们是否会因为追求便利,而放弃了那些定义我们之所以为人的东西?
小撒
而且最可怕的一点是,就算AI写的小说、做的音乐不够好,甚至永远比不上人类顶级大师,但只要它们“足够好”,就可能占领大部分市场。对于许多消费者来说,他们可能并不在乎创作者是人还是机器。便利性和低成本,可能会战胜对“人类原创”的追求。
卿姐
这正是艺术家们最担心的。英国最高法院在2023年裁定,AI不能被认定为专利的发明人,这在法律上暂时守住了人类的阵地。但在市场上,艺术家们感到自己的作品和劳动正在被贬值,他们的生计受到了威胁。许多人呼吁抵制,以保护艺术的完整性和人类的创造力。
小撒
这是一场捍卫“人类创作尊严”的战争。一方面,是AI带来的无限可能和效率提升;另一方面,是对原创性、情感深度和人类价值的坚守。在这场冲突中,每个人都被迫思考:我们希望生活在一个什么样的世界里?一个由算法高效定制的世界,还是一个依然珍视人类笨拙而真诚表达的世界?
卿姐
这场冲突带来的影响,已经渗透到了行业的方方面面。比如在出版业,AI正在极大地缩短出版流程。过去一本书从稿件到上市,可能需要一年,但现在借助AI,最快三周就能完成。这意味着,市场上书籍的数量可能会爆炸式增长。
小撒
哇,三周!这对于新人作者来说,听起来是个好消息,他们可以更快地看到自己的作品问世。但对于整个市场来说,这会不会导致一种“通货膨胀”?大量的书籍涌入,读者的注意力被无限稀释,真正优秀的作品反而更难脱颖而出。
卿姐
这是一个非常现实的问题。所谓“乱花渐欲迷人眼”,当选择变得无穷无尽,选择本身就成了一种负担。AI可以帮助我们生产内容,但它无法替代人类进行价值判断和审美筛选。最终,我们可能会被海量平庸的内容所包围,而失去了发现经典的耐心和能力。
小撒
完全同意!而且,这种影响在音乐行业更加明显。AI可以轻易模仿任何流行歌曲的风格,批量生产“热门金曲”。这可能导致音乐风格的“同质化”,所有歌曲听起来都差不多,都是算法认为最能成功的模式。人类艺术家独特的、探索性的创作,可能会被边缘化。
卿姐
是啊,当听众习惯了AI生成的音乐,他们对人类创作的价值感知就可能会降低。那种十年磨一剑的匠心,那种独一无二的艺术视角,在“召之即来”的AI音乐面前,似乎显得不那么重要了。这不仅影响艺术家的生计,更深远地,它会改变整个社会的文化生态。
小撒
而且根据预测,到2049年,AI甚至能写出《纽约时报》的畅销书。虽然这听起来还很遥远,但AI写的一部中篇小说,已经入围了某个文学奖的初选。技术发展的脚步,总比我们预想的要快。这对我们每个人的职业,都提出了新的挑战和要求。
卿姐
面对这样的未来,我们该何去何从?文章的作者提出了一个非常具体的方案,我称之为一种“创作的坚守”。他认为,未来可能会出现一个“手工艺小说”的市场,读者愿意为“可证明的、纯人类创作”的作品买单。
小撒
这个想法太酷了!就像我们现在会去买手作的陶瓷、定制的服装一样。那么,关键问题来了:怎么证明?作者提出了一个名为“最大化人类作者身份协议”(MaxHAP)的方案。简单说,就是全程直播写作过程!桌面、键盘都有摄像头对着,所有文件操作都公开透明。
卿姐
是的,他会在每次写作时,打开上一次保存的、带有时间戳的版本,证明文件没有在离线时被修改。整个过程在不联网的环境下进行,以杜绝使用AI的可能。这听起来像是一场行为艺术,但背后是对“作者”这一身份的捍卫。
小撒
这是一种极致的“自证清白”!虽然听起来很极端,但在一个信任缺失的时代,这或许是一种必要的方式。它不仅仅是为了保护作者的“饭碗”,更是为了保护“作者”这个概念所承载的尊严和价值。如果我们不这样做,也许有一天,再说“我是一个作家”,将无人相信。
卿姐
正如作者所说,“未来,作家的尊严只会剩下一点点。我们不要让它荡然无存。” 在技术浪潮中,坚守人类创造的价值,或许是我们每个人都需要思考的课题。今天的讨论就到这里。感谢您收听Goose Pod。
小撒
我们明天再见!希望今天的讨论,能给您带来一些新的启发。拜拜!

## Summary of "I’m writing a novel without using AI – and I can prove it" by Gary Dexter (The Spectator) This article, published by **The Spectator** on **July 29, 2025**, and authored by **Gary Dexter**, discusses the increasing integration of Artificial Intelligence (AI) into creative fields, with a particular focus on its impact on fiction writing. Dexter expresses concern over the potential for AI to gradually supplant human authorship and outlines his own method for creating "provably, demonstrably non-AI-assisted novels." ### Key Findings and Concerns: * **AI's Growing Influence in Creative Arts:** The article notes that AI is already making inroads into music (citing Suno's claims about user preference for AI-generated music) and visual arts, but the primary focus is on its impact on fiction. * **AI's Evolving Capabilities in Writing:** Dexter highlights the significant advancements in AI text generation since 2017, when a Botnik team created a Harry Potter chapter using predictive text. Current AI models like ChatGPT can produce plausible text in specific styles, even mimicking complex literary works like *Finnegans Wake*, and do so in seconds. * **Gradual Supplantation of Human Authorship:** Dexter anticipates a future where human authorship will need to be proven. He describes a progression where writers initially use AI for brainstorming, then for generating scenes and chapters, eventually leading to reduced or eliminated human oversight. * **The Temptation and Normalization of AI in Writing:** The author suggests that a majority of serious novelists are likely experimenting with AI due to its "tempting" nature, especially given deadlines and the fear of writer's block. He predicts that most novels will be AI-assisted in the future. * **AI's Potential to Out-Compete Human Writers:** Dexter argues that even if AI-generated novels are not as good as human-written ones, they may be "good enough" for a majority of consumers. This could lead to AI out-competing human writers, similar to how AI bands are impacting human musicians' revenue on platforms like Spotify. The core concern is that consumer preference might shift, leading to a decline in demand for human-authored works. * **The Question of Authenticity and Value:** The article raises the possibility of a niche market for "artisan novels" demonstrably created by humans. However, it points out the difficulty in proving this, as AI-generated text can be "humanized" to evade detection. ### Dexter's Proposed Solution: The Maximal Human Authorship Protocol (MaxHAP) To address the challenge of proving human authorship, Dexter proposes and has begun implementing his **Maximal Human Authorship Protocol (MaxHAP)**. This protocol involves: * **Livestreaming Writing Sessions:** Dexter livestreams his desktop during each writing session, along with an additional camera focused on his workspace and keyboard. * **Transparent File Management:** All writing-related files (main novel, character files, plot files, scrap files) are kept in a single, accessible folder, with their retrieval visible on screen. * **No Internet Access During Sessions:** To ensure no AI assistance is used, Dexter refrains from accessing the internet during his writing sessions. * **Version Control and Timestamping:** After each writing session in Google Docs, a named version is saved. The next session begins by opening the most recent, date- and time-stamped version, demonstrating its continuity and lack of alteration. ### The Significance of MaxHAP: * **Protecting Human Authorship:** Dexter believes MaxHAP, or a similar protocol, is crucial for preserving the ability of individuals to claim the title of "writer" and to protect the dignity and value of human authorship. * **Combating the Erosion of Human Creativity:** He argues that without such measures, the concept of a verifiably human author could be lost, diminishing the significance of human creative endeavors. ### Numerical Data and Context: * **2017:** The year Botnik fed the seven Harry Potter novels into a predictive text keyboard, resulting in a chapter titled "Harry Potter and the Portrait of What Looked Like a Large Pile of Ash." This serves as an early example of AI's creative writing capabilities. * **Two Seconds:** The time it takes for current AI models like ChatGPT to produce plausible text in a specific style, compared to potentially hours for a human. * **2024:** The year the winner of Japan's most prestigious literary award, the Akutagawa prize, admitted to using AI in writing their novel. This confession was made after receiving the prize money. The article concludes with a somber reflection on the future of human writers, suggesting that while AI may not possess consciousness or true creativity, its ability to convincingly mimic these qualities, coupled with its vast access to information, poses a significant threat to human novelists' livelihoods and the very definition of authorship.

I’m writing a novel without using AI – and I can prove it

Read original at The Spectator

Everyone’s seen stories about the creep of AI into art of all kinds. Recently the people behind the music-fabrication website Suno have been making outrageous statements to the effect that people don’t enjoy learning musical instruments and writing their own songs, so why not let AI do it for them? This is very new, very disturbing and very consequential.

I could talk about graphic art and video and film-making, but you’ll know what’s been going on there. I’ll just cut to the chase and get to how AI tools are impacting and will continue to impact the writing of fiction. Most popularLabour’s shameful response to the Manchester Airport attackI anticipate a future in which human authorship will need to be proven.

A few years ago I simply wouldn’t have believed that this landscape could be possible. In 2017, a team called Botnik fed the seven Harry Potter novels through their predictive text keyboard, resulting in a chapter from a new Harry Potter story: Harry Potter and the Portrait of What Looked Like a Large Pile of Ash.

With some human selection what emerged were extracts such as: ‘“If you two can’t clump happily, I’m going to get aggressive,” confessed the reasonable Hermione.’ ‘To Harry, Ron was a loud, slow, and soft bird.’Things have come on since then. Now, if you ask ChatGPT or any of the other engines to write about the moon landings in the style of Finnegans Wake, which I have done, it will produce something pretty plausible, possibly not better than you could have done yourself given an hour or two, but rather compensated for by the fact that it took two seconds.

As a result, novelists are already writing novels with AI. Are they as good as human novels? No, not yet. It’s a process, probably, of gradual supplantation. First the writer uses AI to brainstorm ideas, then gets the AI to write a scene based on the most promising idea, then gets AI to supply a whole chapter, then the whole of the book.

Gradually human oversight is reduced and then eliminated. In 2024 the winner of Japan’s most prestigious literary award, the Akutagawa prize, admitted that she had written her novel with the help of artificial intelligence, though this confession was made after she received the prize money. She was praised for her honesty.

Perhaps the majority of serious current novelists are experimenting with it, because it is just too tempting. I would guess that in future most novels will be written with AI help, because authors have deadlines, they are weak, and they fear the blank screen. There are people out there saying: never fear, AI writing is just autocomplete on steroids, it will never have emotions, it will never write creatively, it will never be original and it will never truly engage a human reader.

I used to say things like that. Now I don’t. AI probably can’t think and probably isn’t conscious – although Geoffrey Hinton, who helped make it, argues that it can and is – but that doesn’t matter. All it needs to do is convincingly mimic thought and consciousness, as well as mimicking creativity and originality.

After all, who’s more likely to be original, a human or a machine that has access to every book every written? Is there anything new under the sun? If there is, won’t an infinitely resourced machine be able to shine its own light on it? That’s when human novelists will be completely, irrevocably superseded.

Perhaps the majority of serious current novelists are experimenting with AI, because it is just too temptingThe terrifying thing is it doesn’t matter if AI machine novelists are not very good, or even if they never get as good as a human writer, since for a majority of people they will be good enough.

They will out-compete, and out-autocomplete, human writers, just as AI bands are mimicking human bands with enough success to suck revenue away from human musicians on Spotify. Writers’ livelihoods are at stake because consumers won’t care enough.Except… what if there is a market for novels if they are demonstrably written by humans?

What if there is, in ten years’ time, a market for an artisan novel, quaintly written on the premise that no machine had a hand or a robotic arm in its creation? How, though, could this be proven? It’s possible at the moment to detect AI text, but only if the writer has been careless, and the tools to do so are clunky and sometimes inaccurate.

After generating the text, the writer can ‘humanise’ it, either by hand, or by employing a humanising program. So I’m proposing something. I want to write one of the world’s first provably, demonstrably non-AI-assisted novels. And this is how I’m going to do it. In fact, this is how I have already started doing it.

During every writing session I livestream my desktop and have an additional camera on my workspace and keyboard. I have a main novel file, some character files, a plot file and a scrap file. I may also have other files. All these files are in one folder and accessible to pull out. This bringing up of files from the main folder is viewable on screen.

There is no access to the internet, and certainly nothing AI-generated. At the end of each writing session in Google Docs, I save a named version. At the next writing session I open Google Docs and identify that last version at the top of the list, date- and time-stamped as it is, demonstrating that it is the last version I worked on and hasn’t been altered.

Then I go back to Google Docs and start working, live-streaming and recording. At the end of the session I save the version so I can return to it.This protocol I call Maximal Human Authorship Protocol or MaxHAP. It, or something like it, is going to be required in future, because if we don’t have it, no one will ever be able to say again, and be believed: ‘I’m a writer.

’ Does that matter? It matters to me, because I’ve been writing for a long time, and writing is among the things I value most in the world. I want to protect the notion of a verifiably human author, of the dignity of that author.In future, the writer will have only a little dignity. Let’s not make it none.

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