S6 Ep. 17: Chatbot vs. Writer: Vauhini Vara on the Perils and Possibilities of Artificial Intelligence - a podcast by fiction/non/fiction

from 2023-01-26T11:00

:: ::

Novelist and journalist Vauhini Vara joins V.V. Ganeshananthan and Whitney Terrell to discuss how ChatGPT, the artificial intelligence chatbot developed by OpenAI, may—or may not—impact publishing, education, journalism, and the humanities in general. Vara explains differences between ChatGPT and another OpenAI tool, GPT-3, which she used as a way into writing about the death of her sister, a topic she had previously found unapproachable. She reads from the resulting essay, “Ghosts,” which was published by The Believer and anthologized in Best American Essays 2022.
To hear the full episode, subscribe through iTunes, Google Play, Stitcher, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app (include the forward slashes when searching). You can also listen by streaming from the player below. Check out video versions of our interviews on the Fiction/Non/Fiction Instagram account, the Fiction/Non/Fiction YouTube Channel, and our show website: https://www.fnfpodcast.net/This podcast is produced by Anne Kniggendorf.

Selected Readings:Vauhini Vara

The Immortal King RaoGhosts


Others:Review: ‘The Immortal King Rao,’ by Vauhini Vara - The New York Times

Meet GPT-3. It Has Learned to Code (and Blog and Argue). - The New York TimesIs This the Start of an AI Takeover? - The Atlantic

AI Has Come to Save the Arts from Themselves - The Washington PostAI Reveals the Most Human Parts of Writing | WIRED

Don’t Ban ChatGPT in Schools. Teach With It. - The New York TimesMicrosoft Bets Big on the Creator of ChatGPT in Race to Dominate A.I. - The New York Times

ChatGPT:Optimizing Language Models for Dialogue


Fiction/Non/Fiction Season 6 episode 16: In Memory of Russell Banks: Rick Moody on an Iconic Writer’s Life, Work and LegacyW.B. Yeats’ Autoscript


‘Even the spirits get a say’: A Look Into James Merrill's Ouija Poems by Harriet StaffExquisite Corpse poetry


Will Artificial Intelligence Kill College Writing? Online programs can churn out decent papers on the cheap. What now? – The Chronicle of Higher EducationFiction/Non/Fiction Season 3 Episode 25: No Innocents Abroad: Scott Anderson and Andrew Altschul on the CIA and US Provocateurs in Foreign Politics


Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Further episodes of fiction/non/fiction

Further podcasts by fiction/non/fiction

Website of fiction/non/fiction