My intention with Ms. Smith was to distinguish disclosure from non-disclosure, where non-disclosure exploits reasonable expectation that any creative output is the work of a human, and disclosure no longer exploits that expectation, qua Dennett.
To be clear, I’m not advocating for any kind of acceptance of prompt-only content creation. I don’t think I’m advocating for any particular acceptance of AI-assistance in general, only for a possible framework for how to think about the ethics that attach to it.
My intention with Ms. Smith was to distinguish disclosure from non-disclosure, where non-disclosure exploits reasonable expectation that any creative output is the work of a human, and disclosure no longer exploits that expectation, qua Dennett.
To be clear, I’m not advocating for any kind of acceptance of prompt-only content creation. I don’t think I’m advocating for any particular acceptance of AI-assistance in general, only for a possible framework for how to think about the ethics that attach to it.