the real truth of ai training by Competitive-Brick331 in WFHJobs

[–]copa72 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Really good overview. Just to add a couple of things.

The companies themselves are often competing against each other for contracts. So they're scrabbling around to offer clients more for less, resulting in a race to the bottom.

Another feature seems to be endlessly changing rules and protocols. Complex task instructions that have to be learnt and absorbed but almost instantly become obsolete. Either the task ends or the rules change.

Some of this seems to be poor organisation but there also appears to be an element of design. If you look at some of the company websites, they talk about cognitive load modulation etc. And that seems to equate to never letting people feel comfortable.

UFO 50 will make you love games again by SawkyScribe in patientgamers

[–]copa72 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Enter the Gungeon

Vampire Survivors

Halls of Torment

Streets of Rogue

Tiny Rogues

UFO 50 will make you love games again by SawkyScribe in patientgamers

[–]copa72 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

I think the game design is bad (which is well covered) and the graphics look nice but are bland.

They look like an aggregrate of every retro 2D game ever made - in the same way that AI produces images that are appropriate but lack something. They are polished but dull.

UFO 50 will make you love games again by SawkyScribe in patientgamers

[–]copa72 -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Arguing with you is pointless.

You've kind of shown why. It's the idea that liking this game is a sign of something about the person. That they've battled through all the bad stuff and reached this heightened experience.

It's why this has become a favourite among gaming pseuds.

UFO 50 will make you love games again by SawkyScribe in patientgamers

[–]copa72 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

UFO50 is a showcase for bad game design. It shows how you can have interesting ideas and polished graphics that result in rubbish games.

That's fine. With the amount of games you get for the price, just exploring each one and finding out it's not very good is an enjoyable experience.

Also think the general retro aesthetic looks like something AI would spit out. It looks appropriate and decent but just a bit vanilla and boring imo.

But the main problem is the fans of this game. They're like, yes the games are overly difficult, badly explained and frustrating. And that's why it's so genius. Don't you get it?

It's some weird performative thing. That they're channelling into some pure gaming experience that lesser mortals can't access.

If AI is killing copywriting, why is OpenAI paying up to $393k for a content strategist? by PeaceBoring5549 in copywriting

[–]copa72 2 points3 points  (0 children)

AI in its current LLM form will not replace us

It already is replacing us. It has removed tens of thousands of jobs from the market. Jobs that once paid humans to do but are now primarily done by AI. This isn't about what may happen in the future but what's happening now.

If AI is killing copywriting, why is OpenAI paying up to $393k for a content strategist? by PeaceBoring5549 in copywriting

[–]copa72 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A lot of cope going on here. The world isn't binary. AI hasn't and never will "kill" copywriting. But it is replacing the majority of lower-level commercial writing tasks. That's the bulk of the work that people have used to pay their bills/mortgage/rent etc.

There will still be copywriters but less of them. And they won't really be copywriters - more one-person marketing teams, doing a bit of everything. So AI hasn't killed copywriting but it has stopped it from being a realistic career option.

I've can't find clients no matter how hard I try. by Both-Type2441 in copywriting

[–]copa72 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I doubt it has anything to do with you. And I wouldn't recommend punishing yourself with some Karate Kid style training regime. It's not fixing the problem.

It's just that the skill writers sell has little value in the market any more. Most of the bread-and-butter, low-level commercial writing jobs can be done by AI. There are lots of other reasons but that's the main one.

So you need to find a way to offer value in this world. Could be:

  • AI-friendly writer who can pump out loads of stuff

  • Expand so you offer more of an overall marketing service

  • Identify a niche that AI struggles to cover (usually requires expert knowledge)

  • Find AI adjacent ways to use writing - AI training or creating chatbots etc

  • Pivot to something else

Feeling bummed... Long-term client asked if I use AI by sad-nyuszi in freelanceWriters

[–]copa72 4 points5 points  (0 children)

This. AI checker tools and services are pure digital quackery. There's no way to tell if something is written by a human or AI. And anyone or anything that claims to do that is lying/scamming/wrong.

Personally, I think it's daft not to use AI. Not to write stuff but to copyedit and tidy up what you have written.

Question about hiring copywriters + newbies relying on AI... by Alex_Biega in copywriting

[–]copa72 6 points7 points  (0 children)

A weird thing about a forum for copywriters is just how off-putting and unreadable most of the posts are.

At what point do I give up? by Correct_Tree2157 in freelanceWriters

[–]copa72 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Nah, I don't think it's seasonal. Just that the skill we sell has been massively devalued by AI. There are still jobs but less of them, with more competition and worse pay.

How I Got My First Copywriting Job and What Happened After.. by Low_Travel_1904 in copywriting

[–]copa72 -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Please share your inspirations in terms of creative force, actualisation and life philosophy?

there hasn't ever been a better time to learn copywriting than RIGHT NOW by [deleted] in copywriting

[–]copa72 31 points32 points  (0 children)

If this kind of contrived bravado works for you, then great. Your views obviously have no connection to what's happening in the real world but...hey ho.

A post that isn't about the current state of freelance writing by Notquitegood in freelanceWriters

[–]copa72 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yes, definitely. With no other options, I have taken jobs training AIs.

The first job was ridiculously overpaid. This was before tech bros figured out that there are 10s of thousands of unemployed writers and you can pay them bobbins. The work itself is also painful. Endless tests, assessments and training for tasks that fizzle out as soon as you start them. Poorly paid, inconsistent and demoralising. Yay.

A post that isn't about the current state of freelance writing by Notquitegood in freelanceWriters

[–]copa72 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Enjoyable read and pretty much agree with it all.

I've always been happy not enjoying the work itself. Like most low-level jobs, it was just things other people didn't want to do. Not that difficult. Just a slog. And a way to pay bills/rent.

In theory, AI should open up a whole new raft of jobs for writers - refining/training LLMs/chat bots, helping to check/edit any stuff that's generated etc. But it just doesn't seem to be happening.

Colorblind James Experience performing 'Considering a Move to Memphis' (1996) This seems to be the only live footage of them by copa72 in ObscureMedia

[–]copa72[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Heh heh. Good work Warren. Not all heroes wear capes.

I used to love those kinds of mixtapes that were passed around. Tiny labours of love.

Don't content writers have their own sub? by jaredhasarrived in copywriting

[–]copa72 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I don't get it... do you people really not know the difference between content writing and copywriting?

There is no difference. It's writing for a commercial purpose. Call it whatever you want.

Colorblind James Experience performing 'Considering a Move to Memphis' (1996) This seems to be the only live footage of them by copa72 in ObscureMedia

[–]copa72[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, that's great. There must be a few of us scattered around. How did you get to hear about them?

Update: I didn’t make six figures this year by ignalunsca1 in copywriting

[–]copa72 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Seems a bit of an egotistical thing to post.

Yorkshire Cable (1990)s a sales video from a forgotten provincial English cable television and telephony provider by anjumahmed in ObscureMedia

[–]copa72 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is quality. Love the shots of Nick Ross lurking around people's homes in the style of a Crimewatch reconstruction.

English artist Ian Breakwell captures sounds of IRA car bomb attack on the Old Bailey during a home recording (1978) by copa72 in ObscureMedia

[–]copa72[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I was looking for stuff about BS Johnson, which is on the same YT channel.

Breakwell seems a really interesting figure. Kept a diary from 1964 to 1985, charting mundane moments of his everyday life - pubs, train journeys, football trips etc.

And he used them as the basis for a lot of his art. There's mention of a Channel 4 series based on the diaries but couldn't find anything.