AI in content creation?
AI was quite small a decade ago, with limited, focused knowledge for one specific task. With both recent developments in technology and larger companies owning all the AI, the databases of those companies now possess a substantial amount of knowledge for the AI to use, and its access is uninhibited by legal rights. Modern applications of AI are not only able to replicate text onto the page, they can accumulate data based on the information they’ve been exposed to, and use that deep learning to predict and place the writing in its proper context. AI cannot just replicate language, it can write in the natural language of the dialect it is replicating.
Intelligent writing is writing that flows through one sentence into the other with clear cohesion. This was once a limit of AI, but now with the proper parameters set, AI can follow a story through a logical path of events via its neural network the same way the human brain can. AI has even gotten to the point where it can learn from itself. An example of this is the AI called AlphaGo, which was programmed to beat the best human players of the complex game Go. Not only was the AI able to beat even the most skilled human players, the second model of AlphaGo was able to learn only from the first AI with no other external knowledge, and beat version 1 within a day. Finally, version 3 was able to beat both previous versions of Go, along with other games without even learning the rules. This AI and machine learning leads version 1 and 2 (limited intelligence AI) to become version 3 (superintelligence AI). Google owns AlphaGo, so their AI is superintelligent, expert systems as well.