I’m not sure if it’s appropriate to also discuss the authors notes, but one solution to Eliezers writing obstacles is to publish under a pseudonym. Or why might that not qualify?
Hm. That’s indeed plausible. More so in our age where software can reliably detect authors reliably based on their writing fingerprint. I wonder what will become of pseudonyms in the future.
The last time I saw “writing fingerprint” software it was being used to “prove” that The Book of Mormon’s purported authors were real, in a study whose designers clearly would have failed at the 2-4-6 task. I’m afraid I tossed the idea in a mental box alongside “phrenology” after that.
For one, it would mean he could never talk about his work “as himself”, e.g. on Facebook or Reddit, unless he wanted to set up and constantly use dummy accounts, which is both time-consuming and sometimes in violation of site T&Cs.
I’m not sure if it’s appropriate to also discuss the authors notes, but one solution to Eliezers writing obstacles is to publish under a pseudonym. Or why might that not qualify?
His explanation on Reddit is that his style is too distinctive to go undetected.
Hm. That’s indeed plausible. More so in our age where software can reliably detect authors reliably based on their writing fingerprint. I wonder what will become of pseudonyms in the future.
Link, please? I seem to be failing at Google.
The last time I saw “writing fingerprint” software it was being used to “prove” that The Book of Mormon’s purported authors were real, in a study whose designers clearly would have failed at the 2-4-6 task. I’m afraid I tossed the idea in a mental box alongside “phrenology” after that.
The useful words are “stylometry” and “authorship attribution”.
The last time I read about this was here:
https://www.cs.drexel.edu/~sa499/papers/adversarial_stylometry.pdf
A quick google (for stylometry, fingerprinting) results in summaries e.g.
http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/01/03/software-helps-identify-anonymous-writers-or-helps-them-stay-that-way/?_r=0
Thank you both!
For one, it would mean he could never talk about his work “as himself”, e.g. on Facebook or Reddit, unless he wanted to set up and constantly use dummy accounts, which is both time-consuming and sometimes in violation of site T&Cs.