It's a worryingly perfect time to revive Assassin's Creed's old social stealth multiplayer
In a post last week about Steam's unhelpfully vague generative AI disclosure policies, Nic touched on "that most insidious side-effect of GenAI", the culture of paranoia it has bred among players who find themselves peering at every remotely uncanny piece of video game art, hunting for signs of machine-learning metastasis. Given the lack of transparency about the latest genAI tools, these AI-watchers often do their communities a real service, but there's the risk of art that is merely generic or worse, simply unusual being flagged as generated. The problem goes well beyond games, of course: I've been accused myself of faking whole articles because I've done counter-intuitive things with the framing that read a little like the output from a text scrambler. Read more


In a post last week about Steam's unhelpfully vague generative AI disclosure policies, Nic touched on "that most insidious side-effect of GenAI", the culture of paranoia it has bred among players who find themselves peering at every remotely uncanny piece of video game art, hunting for signs of machine-learning metastasis. Given the lack of transparency about the latest genAI tools, these AI-watchers often do their communities a real service, but there's the risk of art that is merely generic or worse, simply unusual being flagged as generated. The problem goes well beyond games, of course: I've been accused myself of faking whole articles because I've done counter-intuitive things with the framing that read a little like the output from a text scrambler.