Generative AI as a magic system

 We treat generative AI like magic… and magic systems have rules. When creating fantasy worlds, writers think about who can use magic, how magic is performed, what it’s able to do, what its constraints are, what the source of magic is, and what it costs. I’m applying a bit of reverse worldbuilding to the real world to extrapolate the rules of the AI magic system.

Who can use AI magic: magic users pay to use corporate AI magic systems. Those who are wealthy and tech savvy enough can host their own local model. Free magic use is mostly limited to corporate largesse ultimately intended to build magic dependency.

How AI magic is cast: AI spells are cast with written text input through a digital interface. Spells are refined and recast until the outcome satisfies (spells produce different results every time they are cast).

What AI magic can do: AI spells can produce combinations of words that are interpreted as writing, code-like material that sometimes runs as code, images that resemble art, and video that resembles reality. It can create imitations of specific human creators’ work, as well as individual’s speech and appearance. It can also mimic human conversation for a span of time before the spell dissipates. AI magic is near instantaneous, allowing people without technical skills to produce text and graphics faster than writers and artisans.

What AI magic cannot do: AI magic cannot produce the same outcome twice, nor act upon existing conjurations, instead casting spells anew each time. AI magic itself cannot reference sources, though may be used in tandem with other tools that enable citation (though with questionable accuracy). AI magic cannot reason or write, but its conjurations may create the illusion of intelligence through their statistical consistency with written language use.

The source of AI magic: AI magic derives from statistical analysis of human-created art, writing, speech, music, and video, classified and sorted by human laborers in low-cost geos.

The cost of AI magic: Resource costs of AI magic include power, water, and high-end chips, which themselves require specialized manufacturing and rare earth minerals.

Social costs include the reinforcement of racism and sexism, as well as mental harm to AI trainers assessing inputs to the magic system.

Societal costs include job elimination and job intensification as positions able to be reproduced in part by magic are eliminated and that magic work is shifted to the remaining workers.

Information costs include the destruction of the online publishing incentive structure / information commons, leading to more paywalled content; an increase in low-quality material, which makes finding accurate information harder; as well as the danger of political propaganda by poisoned magic systems.

Individual user costs include critical thinking skills, writing abilities, and patience for conversing with humans.

 

Further reading:

The new magic of AI vs. the old magic of artists by Kening Zhu

See also:

Generative AI and the Business Borg aesthetic

Tracy Durnell

25 Jun 2025 at 06:15

Weeknotes: June 14-20, 2025

 
streaks of hail falling in suburban garden
happy solstice hail ๐Ÿ˜‚๐ŸŒง๏ธ

Win of the week: cooked up a giant pot of chickpeas (added a kinda-tadka of fresh rosemary sizzling in oil at the end) for a mildly awkward neighborhood potluck (where the only other handmade food was peanut butter celery sticks ๐Ÿ˜‚ apparently my idea of potluck food is outdated)

Looking forward to: finishing This Will Be Fun by E.B. Asher! I’ve been in a book slump and have been enjoying this — it’s gleefully goofy to balance out the characters’ intense angst and pain

Stuff I did:

  • 13.5 hours consulting — sent over another deliverable ๐Ÿฆพ
  • 0 hours writing oops
  • took Thursday off for Juneteenth
  • watched Yancey Strickler interview Nadia Asparouhova about her new book Antimemetics… may not be quite what I was expecting but I’ll withhold judgment till I get the book
  • got an email about a new program inspired by my high school travels with my track coach and discovered I was mentioned in their promo materials?? ๐Ÿค” still deciding how to reply…
  • one virtual appointment +ย dentist appointment — I’ve been grinding my teeth in my sleep (thanks politics) so they 3D scanned my teeth to make a mouth guard
  • hung out with my sister
  • bonus walk with friend but skipped regular walk for bad weather
  • baked my go-to coffee cake — used a smaller pan which doubled the bake time
  • updated my Signal settings per Cory’s suggestions
  • an hour of gardening to clear paths – again – and get rid of a bunch of plants with some kinda mildew on the leaves… I’ve been trying to nurture my mildewy ninebark back to health but finally hacked almost all of it waaay back
  • ๐Ÿคฆโ€โ™€๏ธ I somehow failed to observe that my pine tree had candles last month, which I bought a taller ladder specifically to prune… the wood on the new growth is still green so I went for it! ๐Ÿคž๐Ÿ˜ฌ Husband says if the tree gets too big he’s cutting it down, it’s living on borrowed time anyway, so it’s fine if I screw it up — and it is very possible I done fucked up, we’ll find out next year I guess ๐Ÿคทโ€โ™€๏ธ

Dinners:

  • fake chicken burgers (Quorn) + tots + ginger beer + dill pickle
  • cauliflower shawarma + fries with toum (apparently we last ordered this exactly one year ago ๐Ÿ˜‚)
  • fish wraps with mango salsa and air fryer potatoes + ginger beer — cooked the tilapia from frozen, 20 minutes at 400 worked great
  • fake chicken burgers (Impossible) with BBQ sauce and pineapple + curly fries
  • baked feta pasta — tried goat’s milk feta, not a great batch
  • went out to the family Mexican place — somehow with tip and drinks it turned into $90?!
  • pigs in a blanket + baked beans + tater tots

Reading:

Words I looked up / concepts I learned:

Shoutout to Jeremy for reminding me of the existence of Webster’s 1913 Dictionary, and the paean to it by James Somers from 2014

Choice phrases:

“The books are not yet on the shelves, not yet touched by the mild boredom of order.”
— Walter Benjamin, Unpacking My Library (emphasis mine)

“The fear of fiction waxes and wanes, spiking every couple of decades like some kind of hysterical cicada.”
— Lyta Gold, Dangerous Fictionsย 

Online, we perform solidarity for strangers rather than engaging in hard conversations with comrades.
— adrienne maree brown, We Will Not Cancel Us

Pretty stuff I saw:

New music I listened to:

Website changes:

Nature notes:

  • birds are digging the bird bath!
  • my older oceanspray is sending up shoots like no one’s business
  • blackberries are flowering in the Back 40 :/
  • watched the chonky juvenile bird just chilling on the path chirping up a storm… heard a towhee calling so I expect the parents were around
  • swallowtail butterflies in the garden almost every day! I planted more of a bee garden so we don’t get a ton of butterflies
Tracy Durnell

21 Jun 2025 at 04:03



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