title: AIs can write for us but will we actually want them to?
url: https://www.bryanbraun.com/2023/04/14/ais-can-write-for-us-but-will-we-want-them-to/
hash_url: 89aa5bbfea
From ChatGPT to Microsoft 365 Copilot, we’re seeing a wave of AIs that can write and write well.
In a recent post, Jim Nielsen described how having AIs write for us is a trade-off:
“Writing is a moment for self-reflection, for providing the space and time necessary for the conception of thoughts or feelings that can change your heart or mind. Offloading that task to AI is not necessarily a net-gain, it is a trade-off. One to make consciously.”
Jim Nielsen - More Everything With AI
That made me think about my own writing. If I had to break down my current writing activity (not counting code), it would look something like this:
Could I hand any of these over to AI?
Definitely no on the journaling and blog posts, since those are basically pure self-reflection. It’s me figuring out what I believe. I could augment that a bit with spelling and grammar check tools, but it’s hard to imagine offloading more without compromising the process.
For texting and emails I already use autocomplete and Smart Compose. I also use Gmail templates for frequent responses, so I can’t see how I could automate this much further.
Personal notes (for meetings, books, and coding) seems the most promising but I don’t think AI can do this for me either. When I take notes, I’m only interested in writing out the stuff that matters to me. Every book I read has a hundred summaries on the internet, each more detailed and comprehensive than mine, but I still take book notes because I want to remember what impacted me. Even if an AI knew what those things were, delegating that work would defeat the purpose.
So maybe I don’t want AIs to take over my writing but that doesn’t mean it’s useless. Autocomplete, grammar check, and Smart Compose… these tools are already AI powered. As AI tech progresses, I expect these tools to improve and become more pervasive, impacting my writing in little ways, mostly from the margins.