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See:
On the outskirts of Gotham, far beyond the shadows of Arkham and the neon skyline, Bruce Wayne owned a secret farm. Not for cattle, not for crops—but for Cadbury eggs.
By day, it looked like a quiet countryside estate. Rolling green fields. Hens clucking in their pens. But each hen laid something far sweeter than an ordinary egg: perfectly wrapped Cadbury Creme Eggs. No one in Gotham knew how Bruce had engineered this miracle—some whispered Lucius Fox had genetically modified the chickens, others suspected sorcery.
By night, Batman stalked the city. He fought crime, gliding over rooftops, chasing villains through alleys. But when dawn broke, he returned to the farm. Alfred, ever practical, would inspect the day’s yield.
“Another thousand, Master Wayne. At this rate, Gotham will drown in sugar.”
Bruce would smirk beneath tired eyes. “Good. The Joker feeds on chaos. Let him try to corrupt a city high on chocolate.”
And sure enough, crime plummeted. Bank robbers abandoned their plans to gorge on caramel-filled treasures. Harley Quinn left a stick-up halfway through to raid the barn. Even the Riddler was stumped, staring at a foil-wrapped egg in his palm: What has no yolk, yet still comes from a hen?
The Cadbury Egg Farm became Gotham’s strangest symbol of peace. Children lined up at dawn, wide-eyed as Alfred distributed eggs with a butler’s grace. Gotham was still Gotham—gritty, dark, unpredictable—but now it had a sweetness hidden in its heart.
And when Commissioner Gordon asked Batman how long the farm could last, the Dark Knight only replied:
“As long as Gotham needs hope… and chocolate.”
if writing is like photography, my camera lens keeps going out of focus and aiming not at the target all the time.
the motive gets lost in the split second when I try to pick a word for the paragraph.
It would be more interesting if it were actually written by an AI, and you'd have to figure out if it's an AI you're having a discussion with, or figure out what the AI is trying to achieve, other than posting something without purpose.
Only a human would post something for no purpose. Or perhaps it expects its purpose to become apparent after posting it? You never know what someone's intentions are. Especially not if it's human.
There is still much ground to cover when it comes to AI development, because there is a lot an AI cannot do. An AI can do a lot, but there is also a great deal of things it cannot do.
While AI writing has significant drawbacks, it is not universally "bad" and its quality depends on the context and purpose. The general perception of AI writing is that it can be bland and unoriginal because it generates text based on existing patterns rather than genuine creativity or human experience. However, it can be a highly efficient tool for certain tasks and can be improved with human input.
The drawbacks of AI writing
Lacks authentic creativity: AI models are trained on existing data, meaning their output can be unoriginal, abstract, and repetitive. They lack the personal vulnerability, emotional resonance, and unique experiences that make human writing memorable.
Weakens long-form content: For creative tasks like novel or plot writing, AI often fails to remember character arcs or subplots, resulting in bland, formulaic narratives. It is not an effective tool for high-quality storytelling.
Produces text that lacks flow and context: Because AI language models generate content one word at a time based on statistical probability, the resulting text often lacks logical structure and flow. The sentences may be grammatically correct but fail to deliver real value.
Ethical concerns: The use of AI raises issues of plagiarism and the potential devaluation of original, human-authored content. The risk of AI-generated content being used to create fake or misleading information also remains a serious concern.
Potential for skill atrophy: Over-reliance on AI writing tools could diminish a person's own ability to write and express their thoughts, which can harm the long-term careers of students and developing writers.
When AI writing is beneficial
First drafts and outlines: AI can quickly generate a foundation for a project, helping to overcome writer's block or provide a starting structure for an essay or report.
Efficiency for routine tasks: For commodity writing such as internal memos, emails, or data-heavy summaries, AI is highly efficient. It can produce large amounts of consistent, grammatically correct content quickly.
Idea generation and brainstorming: AI can be used as a collaborative partner to explore potential topics, brainstorm additional points, and find engaging metaphors or analogies.
Editing and refining: AI can help with revising drafts by identifying redundant language, improving structure, or checking for grammar and tone.
Bridging the writing gap for non-writers: For individuals who don't consider themselves strong writers, AI can help them articulate their ideas more professionally and confidently in a business context.
How to improve AI-generated writing
The key to using AI effectively is to treat it as a writing assistant, not a replacement for a human author. The final product should always be infused with your unique voice and judgment.
Edit and fact-check thoroughly: AI can "hallucinate" information, so it's essential to fact-check any data or statistics it provides. You should also rewrite and edit the text to refine the tone and flow.
Add your personality: To make the text more engaging and authentic, incorporate personal stories, humor, or specific details that AI cannot invent.
Provide detailed instructions: Clear, specific prompts are crucial for getting a useful output. The more context you provide about your topic and audience, the better the AI can assist you.
Collaborate and iterate: Use the AI's output as a starting point. Provide feedback and use follow-up prompts to refine the text rather than accepting the initial response as
There's simply a lot of stuff it can't do, or doesn't have the faculties for.
About writing fiction: That doesn't really matter, because it's fiction. It cannot be "good" or "bad." Maybe I like the story, maybe I dislike the story. How does that matter anyway? It's a story about something fictional. It doesn't matter if it's "good" or "bad."
It depends what you are trying to get out of it. Why do you want to hear a story anyway? Does it make you happy to listen to a story?
About your question: No, it's not "bad." Calling it "good" or "bad" is just someone's opinion. People spreading their opinions is no problem, but you should avoid reading them.
Most of the AI's i've tested write correctly, I think. I don't care if it's bland.
The only mistake the AI made was calling me a human, because I am obviously an alien. But it didn't knew that, so we can't really blame it for it.