Automation, Writing and Voice
I could not find a widely accessible study about how much the average adult writes in a day.1 This includes text messages, perfunctory forms or notes filled in at a workplace setting, and other acts of simple literacy-anything.
In the era of person computing, wide-scale electronic writing has been around long enough to have evolved through several phases. Looking back, it’s hard to believe that the writing of emails was once considered a degrading influence on the writing ability of the average person. Now, the effect of the early internet on writing habits looks mixed at worse; maybe it was even its own golden age. The period when email was the king of electronic communication has been the subject of favorable postmortems and much nostalgia for more than a decade. In hindsight, the so-called “You’ve Got Mail” era (~1998-2008), when it was more common to write long and intimate communications, shared in the best qualities of the era that preceded it (what the first generation of internet users called the “snail mail” times) while adding the instant gratification and fluidity offered by instant electronic delivery.
What will be said about the everything that has passed since? To skip to the latest development, AI will have such a (potentially) profound effect that we should wait and observe instead of pronouncing.
Most of the consternation about literacy is on the reading side, but it is conceivable that writing, too, could decline to a vanishing point. Imagine a world in which texts are routinely produced by indirect inputs like mood, basic biomarkers (pulse, brain signals), or who knows what other traces in the environment and the datasphere. Writing itself is unlikely to disappear soon, but it could become a byproduct of other processes. The idea of a human “generating” writing herself could become as unusual and artisanal as the making one’s own shoes or clothes.
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