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April 29, 2024 [View in browser]( Welcome back! If you've recently tried to buy a book online and thrown up your hands in frustration at the number of bad AI-generated dupes dominating your search results, you're not alone. Senior correspondent Constance Grady is here to dig into that economy and its consequences.
âCaroline Houck, senior editor of news [Two mushrooms with white stems and red caps spotted with white grow out of the ground.] Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images The ebook grift economy Six months ago, I spoke with a man named Elan Trybuch about a problem he was seeing online. He kept coming across different ebooks about mushroom foraging that looked somehow off. Off as in: maybe poisonous. The books were shorter than most foraging guides were, and way, way cheaper, says Trybuch. Heâs a software engineer and volunteer secretary for the New York Mycological Society, a nonprofit [devoted to]( âspreading knowledge, love and appreciation of fungi.â He knows mushrooms and he knows [AI](, and he thought the covers of these books were probably AI-generated. âThey had mushroom structures that donât quite make sense,â says Trybuch. They were the mycological equivalent of a picture of a hot blonde with six fingers and too many teeth. Most disturbing was the information inside the books was totally wrong. âThey arenât even giving you descriptions of real mushrooms. Theyâre giving you something completely made up,â Trybuch says. Any readers looking to try to use these books to figure out which mushrooms were safe to eat and which werenât would be out of luck, which to Trybuch was seriously concerning. âIt could literally mean life or deathâ if you eat the wrong mushroom, he says. The problem of very low-quality, very low-priced, probably at least partially AI-generated ebooks is not confined to mushroom foraging. Garbage ebooks have been a problem on [Amazon]( for at least a decade, but â not unlike many strains of fungi â theyâve exploded over the last few years. I spent months [investigating the shadowy economy where theyâre produced](, and what I learned took me by surprise. [spiral bookshelves] John Ricky/Anadolu via Getty Images Inside the scammy world of garbage ebook publishing Garbage ebooks are all over Amazonâs Kindle store, on every topic. Searching for Jonathan Haidtâs bestselling new book [The Anxious Generation](, I found Jonathan Haidt: The Biography of Jonathan David Haidt, Navigating Morality and Policy; A Joosr Guide to... The Happiness Hypothesis by Jonathan Haidt: Finding Modern Truth in Ancient Wisdom; and The Jonathan Haidt Story: Exploring the Life and Work of a Renowned Social Psychologist, Author, and Advocate. None of these are actually books so much as book-shaped digital files, designed to be picked up in keyword searches and get clicked on in a hurry by someone a tiny bit distracted or not digitally savvy enough to notice what theyâre doing. This kind of grift has been around for a while. Now, with the rise of large language models, garbage ebooks have become easier and cheaper than ever to make. Garbage book grifters often donât use AI to write their books, but they do use it to pick a topic and build an outline. Then they give the outline to a wildly underpaid ghostwriter to flesh it out into something that will pass muster as a real book. The model is a dangerously inviting prospect for anyone whoâs ever toyed with the idea of publishing a book but doesnât want to actually write one. It turns out, though, that the people who make garbage ebooks mostly lose money. The real cash seems to come from the people who teach others the garbage ebook scheme. These teachers claim theyâve shared the key to a life of passive income, but their students say all their courses offer is demands for more and more money, with the ever-deferred promise to teach you the real secrets to easy money once youâve paid just a few thousand more dollars. Even these grifters are not the real villains. They are often small-time operators working one level of a very big grift industry. The grift is that technology and retail platforms have incentivized a race to the bottom when it comes to selling books. Theyâve built an ecosystem where all the incentives are to sell at high volume and low cost. In book production, the biggest cost-saving and time-saving measure you can take is cutting out the labor of writing the actual book. Together, without ever caring enough about the issue to deliberately try to do so, these corporations have built a landscape in which itâs hard to trust what you read and hard to sell what you write. In the end, everyone loses: the would-be writers getting grifted in a fake publishing school, the real writers whose products are getting choked out of the marketplace by floods of cheap garbage, and the readers who just want to be able to buy a book without having to check to make sure the author isnât a robot. I asked Elan Trybuch if he thought anyone was buying all those fake mushroom foraging guides. âYeah,â he said. âI mean, thereâs a sucker born every minute.â Read the full article [here](. â[Constance Grady, senior correspondent]( [Listen]( Honey, We Saved the Bees Millions of bees died because of colony collapse disorder over the past few decades, but Americaâs honeybee population has now rocketed to an all-time high. [Listen now]( CLIMATE - Have we reached peak emissions?: The world may be close to turning the corner in the fight to corral climate change. [[Vox](]
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