The vast majority of words have been written thousands or millions of times, by children, novelists, dictionary companies, and of course, AI. There will be very few words that are not available to AI.
I know that’s not what you meant, but you’ll have to define your meaning a LOT more clearly in order to get any meaningful answers.
You should start with an estimate of how many words have been written today, and a Fermi estimate of what fraction are primarily generated by AI (to whatever threshold you set for humans generating prompts and editing/curating responses). This will at least nail down your definitions enough to ask a question. Oh, and how do you count machine-to-machine data transfers? Is that writing? If not, what’s the formal definition?
Then talk about timeframes, and your p(doom). Depending on how long AI exists, compared to humans, and how much overlap there is, this could lead to VASTLY different answers.
The vast majority of words have been written thousands or millions of times, by children, novelists, dictionary companies, and of course, AI. There will be very few words that are not available to AI.
I know that’s not what you meant, but you’ll have to define your meaning a LOT more clearly in order to get any meaningful answers.
You should start with an estimate of how many words have been written today, and a Fermi estimate of what fraction are primarily generated by AI (to whatever threshold you set for humans generating prompts and editing/curating responses). This will at least nail down your definitions enough to ask a question. Oh, and how do you count machine-to-machine data transfers? Is that writing? If not, what’s the formal definition?
Then talk about timeframes, and your p(doom). Depending on how long AI exists, compared to humans, and how much overlap there is, this could lead to VASTLY different answers.