Already helping businesses quickly process scores of generalized agreements, AI-automated contracts from Evisort can now be trained to feature uncommon clauses and wording as well.
Essentially, the instant-contract company has opened an ‘Automation Hub,’ which enables users to train Evisort software to auto-write contracts that are more customized.
Evisort says the process needed to train its software for custom wording is non-technical – although it does take a bit of time.
In other AI-generated writing news:
*In-Depth Guide: Text Wizard: Reviewer Phillip Stemann says his experience with AI writer Text Wizard was hit-and-miss.
Some outputs worked fine for him – others, not so much.
Even so, Stemann offers a detailed look at how Text Wizard works in this post – available in both text and video formats.
*A Former English Teacher’s Take on AI Writing: Communications consultant Leon Furze indicates auto-writers currently can get the job done – but they’re not setting the world ablaze with inspiration.
In a number of experiments Furze recounts in this post, AI super-computer driven auto-writer GPT-3 did an okay job of spurting-out short, general essays on general topics.
But there was no prose that sang.
Too often than not, Fruze indicates, GPT-3’s text output was a bit “vanilla.”
*A Novelist’s Take on AI Writing: Despite AI writing’s stunning advances, novelist Sherryl Clark believes humans will always hold the upper hand when it comes to authentic writing.
Granted, AI computers can mimic fiction, Clark says.
But in the end, humans have the goods when it comes to communicating the human experience, she says.
Even so, Clark wonders if years from now, readers will have no qualms about how the fiction they enjoy is actually written.
Observes Clark: “If you knew it was written by a computer, would that change the way you read it?
“It would for me.
“But maybe for others, it wouldn’t.”
*AI as Movie Director: IndustryWired Magazine writer Rahul says movies auto-generated by text inputs may only be a few new twists of code away.
Rahul’s reasoning: Currently, OpenAI and Google already have experimental software that can auto-generate images from text inputs.
Auto-generated video is just a bit more complicated, Raul surmises.
*Bloom: Super AI-Writer Looking to Vanquish Bias: BigScience’s Bloom AI-Writer – competing in the same league as GPT-3 – hopes to quash bias common in other, super-powerful AI writers.
Bloom’s competitors “suffer from serious practical and ethical flaws, such as parroting human biases.
“These are difficult to tackle, because the inner workings of most such models are closed to researchers,” according to Elizabeth Gibney, a writer for Nature.
BigScience, a loose association of approximately 1,000 academic volunteers, aims to eradicate this problem in part by making the code underpinning Bloom open source – or available for all to see and examine for free, according to Gibney.
*AI Writer Frase Gets Major Update: This post on Ahoi! offers a blow-by-blow video guide to the numerous recent upgrades to Frase – one of a number of AI-generated writers on the market.
Those include:
~A full draft generator
~A ‘write about this’ button
~An article rewriter
~A How-To Blog Post Generator
*Generating Content Ideas With AI: Marceo Beilin, a writer for Search Engine Journal, puts AI writing through its paces in this post.
Offering a decent background on AI writing tools, Beilin goes on to show how an AI writer can auto-generate:
~Blog posts
~SEO meta descriptions
~Marketing Emails
~Marketing Copy
*Using AI for Digital Media Analysis: Signal AI has rolled-out a new product that renders analysis of trends, sentiment and the like found on digital media on a continually updated graph.
Dubbed ‘External Intelligence Graph,’ the tool can be tuned to track mentions, sentiment and similar for a specific company, product — or virtually any other concept.
Observes Peter Wayner, a writer for VentureBeat: “While the raw search results can be useful, the more useful insights may come from watching how the External Intelligence Graph evolves.
“That is: Do some companies gain or lose in mentions with positive sentiment — or do companies grow closer to some topics over time.”
*AI Big Picture: Google Fires Engineer Who Claims Its AI is Conscious: Waxing philosophic on the existential implications of AI has gotten Google engineer Blake Lemoine fired.
Lemoine was canned recently by the tech goliath after he asserted a Google-created chatbot achieved consciousness – raising ethical concerns.
Google had denied that the chatbot is sentient.
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–Joe Dysart is editor of RobotWritersAI.com and a tech journalist with 20+ years experience. His work has appeared in 150+ publications, including The New York Times and the Financial Times of London.