When an archaeology website uses #AI to “write” an article and it scrapes the Elden Ring wiki. 🤣🤣🤣
@stopthatgirl7 Wasn't there a historical novel where the (presumably) human author included dye-making instructions taken straight from a Zelda game guide, Octoroks and all?
Zelda Breath of the Wild recipe accidentally added into author's novel

A Reddit user spots the unique ingredients in John Boyne's historical drama novel.

CNET
@stopthatgirl7 does it say anything about Curtanas? because Curtana is both a sword and my phone's codename

@stopthatgirl7
Maybe I should put up a few sites for AI models to scrape.

Also I can understand using AI to help, but did the author/editor really not proofread it before posting? Reminds me of the lawyer who made bogus sources in court and got his boss in trouble.

@stopthatgirl7 This is almost as bad as the novelist that used a red dye recipe from Breath of the Wild in his published historical fiction novel
https://www.theverge.com/tldr/2020/8/3/21352299/zelda-breath-of-the-wild-red-clothes-dye-traveler-gates-of-wisdom-john-boyne-google-search-results
Zelda recipe appears in serious novel by serious author after rushed Google search

John Boyne’s latest book includes a small Zelda easter egg, despite being set in the real world. The author appears to have accidentally used a Polygon Zelda guide to find the real-world ingredients for red clothes dye.

The Verge
@fskornia I remember that one! 🤣

@stopthatgirl7 Wow that's a pretty word for word copy. So much for LLMs "only learning from our content not copying".

#AI #LLM

@stopthatgirl7 and the "AI" techbros (and the OSI 😿) still want to make us believe that that is not copyright violation?