Once upon a time I had to show proof of age to buy a drink in a pub. Back then, a driving licence didn't work because it only proved a person was over 17. (I'm talking about when a driving licence was a piece of pink paper that didn't show date of birth. You know, deep time.) Or I could just go to the pub with a friend. I had a special friend, Paul, who was tall, 5' 11", spoke with a deep voice, and looked mature. Kind of. A friend who didn't mind buying all the drinks.
Years later I still have proof of age problems, only now it's to get me into places that do special rates for pensioners.
When I go abroad, on holiday, I have to prove my nationality so they'll allow me to leave the country. So I have a passport. Which is even more important if I want to come back home a few weeks later.
So, proving who I am is nothing new, but in the 21st century, I have a new problem of identity. How do I prove I'm human? At least, how do I prove that the books and stories I write are written by me, and not by an AI? Yes, when I'm uploading a manuscript I tick the declaration box that states, "I did not use AI to write this book," but come on, an AI could do that. And ticking a box is going to be a damn site easier for an AI than, say, calling a friend and begging him to come out to the pub on a Saturday night to buy drinks for me, when he'd rather stay home and watch TV.
So here's the point. I've written a book. Or ten, to be exact. Meanwhile, AI has written a book, or several million to be less exact. I need some kind of proof of life — some evidence that my book was written by me.
Right. Here's my attempt at proving that I am a living, breathing, starving writer. I'll do it with a series of photographs. Yeah, and AI could do this, too, but their notebooks wouldn't be as scruffy, and their spelling would be better. (I pay an editor a lot of money to fix my spelling and grammar and plot holes, but sometimes these things can be useful evidence of a flawed but human brain)
This is a tiny sample I've selected, from three separate notebooks, and from a sprawling, floor-sized mind map.
I should have photographed my litter bin on a weekly basis—lot of stuff went in there— but who takes photos of their bin?
What else? Oh, I know. How about a photo of my office chair, where I've worn the back out? (The straight line is because I tried to patch it with stick-on tape, then wore out the stick-on tape and it fell off) The arm rest looks good because I only just reupholstered it.
Note the box of tissues, for when the whole job gets too much. That's another thing with AIs, they don't break down in tears of despair.
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