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China Literature Unveils AI Writer's Assistant to Revolutionize Online Literature

Meet Yuewen Miaobi, the AI writer's assistant set to transform online literature. It's not replacing writers, but speeding up content creation and IP development.

There is a poster in which there is a robot, there are animated persons who are operating the...
There is a poster in which there is a robot, there are animated persons who are operating the robot, there are artificial birds flying in the air, there are planets, there is ground, there are stars in the sky, there is watermark, there are numbers and texts.

China Literature Unveils AI Writer's Assistant to Revolutionize Online Literature

China Literature, a leading online literature platform, has developed Yuewen Miaobi, a large language model (LLM), and its associated Writer's Assistant, Schreiber-Assistent Miaobi. The company, Yuewen Technology, aims to revolutionize the literary landscape with AI-generated tools.

CEO Xiaonan Hou of China Literature believes AI-generated content (AIGC) will not replace writers but rather assist them. He compares it to the shift from manual to assisted driving. AI tools like Yuewen Miaobi can simplify complex processes, such as manga adaptations, making them more efficient.

Currently in testing, Yuewen Miaobi can aid writers in story development, scenario creation, and research. It can generate character names, appearances, personalities, and literary context based on the writer's inputs. China Literature plans to use this LLM to develop derivative formats like audiobooks, comics, and videos, accelerating the creation of original IP in online literature and facilitating the development of the literature IP ecosystem.

Hou expects AI to play a significant role in this transition, but he emphasizes that AI tools cannot replicate creativity. The overall structure of literary works will still require human writers. The company's goal is to evolve Yuewen Miaobi into a multimodal LLM and fully integrate it into the creative and IP ecosystems.

China Literature's Yuewen Miaobi and Writer's Assistant Miaobi are set to transform the online literature landscape. While AI won't replace writers, it will accelerate content creation and facilitate the development of the literature IP ecosystem. With more features expected later this year or in 2024, the future of literary creation looks increasingly AI-assisted.

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