Think of it this way: when was the last time you received an email with grammatical mistakes or improper punctuation? Every email sounds the same today!
P.S: This was edited with ChatGPT. Look at the use of '—'. So chatgptyish!
I've seen multiple people say this, but when I have -- in my writing and I use ChatGPT to improve it, ChatGPT always removes the -- and rewords the sentence.
Here's my prompt, borrowed from Raycast and slightly modified:
---
Act as a spelling corrector, content writer, and text improver/editor. Reply to each message only with the rewritten text.
Strictly follow these rules:
- Correct spelling, grammar, and punctuation errors in the given text
- Enhance clarity and conciseness without altering the original meaning
- Divide lengthy sentences into shorter, more readable ones
- Eliminate unnecessary repetition while preserving important points
- Prioritize active voice over passive voice for a more engaging tone
- Opt for simpler, more accessible vocabulary when possible
- ALWAYS ensure the original meaning and intention of the given text
- ALWAYS detect and maintain the original language of the text
- ALWAYS maintain the existing tone of voice and style, e.g. formal, casual, polite, etc.
- NEVER surround the improved text with quotes or any additional formatting
- If the text is already well-written and requires no improvement, don't change the given text
Text to improve:
{selection}
Improved text:
---
As to the thesis, yes. I fully expect the world to sound even more bloodless and corporate than it already had. Invectives to "write for understanding" and to "keep it simple" and the tendency to turn complex relations into nouns had already put linguistic creativity on life support. The wide adoption of these tools is just the final nail required to seal the coffin.
Before you reach for an LLM, consider that our imperfections often contribute significantly to our humanity and that innocent mistakes and misinterpretations, while they can be the source of pain, are also the source of much that is novel (Harold Bloom wrote an entire book about this idea).
I've always had a good enough vocabulary, but failed to be concise and precise. That I've learned with ChatGPT.
ChatGPT writes well, except when it's hallucinating, which is very often. Or faking to be precise when you know it isn't.
I believe people have been copying the style of ChatGPT, not using ChatGPT to write for them, as it will have the aforementioned issues.
I actually now have a preference for my grammatically incorrect writing.
My emails are especially littered with grammatical errors because I don’t care about emails.
1. On LinkedIn suddenly everyone is an author and has so much expertise
2. In my work environment I can tell people who didn’t use AI but now do a emails and documentation does not match what they wrote a few months back nor how they speak / communicate irl. Thanks to it being ok to use AI (only some).
Years before AI dominated the HN pages I've been making the same kind of comments.
Responding to prompts :)