<https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/feb/21/sci-fi-publisher-clarkesworld-halts-pitches-amid-deluge-of-ai-generated-stories>

One of the most prestigious publishers of science fiction short stories has 
closed itself to submissions after a deluge of AI-generated pitches overwhelmed 
its editorial team.

Clarkesworld, which has published writers including Jeff VanderMeer, Yoon Ha 
Lee and Catherynne Valente, is one of the few paying publishers to accept open 
submissions for short stories from new writers.

But that promise brought it to the attention of influencers promoting “get rich 
quick” schemes using AI, according to founding editor Neil Clarke.

In a typical month, the magazine would normally receive 10 or so such 
submissions that were deemed to have plagiarised other authors, he wrote in a 
blogpost. But since the release of ChatGPT last year pushed AI language models 
into the mainstream, the rate of rejections has rocketed.

In January, Clarke said, the publisher rejected 100 submissions, banning their 
“authors” from submitting again. In February to date, he has banned more than 
500.

“I’ve reached out to several editors and the situation I’m experiencing is by 
no means unique,” he wrote. “It does appear to be hitting higher-profile 
‘always open’ markets much harder than those with limited submission windows or 
lower pay rates.

“It’s clear that business as usual won’t be sustainable and I worry that this 
path will lead to an increased number of barriers for new and international 
authors. Short fiction needs these people.

“It’s not just going to go away on its own and I don’t have a solution.”

Closing submissions is a drastic move. Until a solution is identified, the 
magazine is not considering stories from authors.

“We will reopen, but have not set a date,” Clarke said on social media. 
“Detectors are unreliable. Pay-to-submit sacrifices too many [legitimate] 
authors. Print submissions are not viable for us.


“The people causing the problem are from outside the [science fiction and 
fantasy] community. Largely driven in by ‘side hustle’ experts making claims of 
easy money with ChatGPT. They are driving this and deserve some of the disdain 
shown to the AI developers.”

Generative AI technology is also causing unrest further afield than fiction 
circles.

Image generation, with tools including Midjourney, Dall-E and Stable Diffusion, 
has seen similar controversies, with the Colorado state art fair unknowingly 
awarding first prize in its “emerging digital artists” category to an image 
created by Midjourney – although the prize money was received by Jason Allen, 
who had typed the prompt into the AI tool and entered the output in the fair 
under his name.

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