Additional Information
Content
Imagine lots of real people improving your copy in an anonymous, virtual world
How do you know I'm a human? Or how do you know a human is writing this? Maybe this is all being generated by an algorithm.
It’d be a pretty ballsy algorithm to raise the idea in this way, but that’s the kind of cunning algorithms have. Or perhaps it’s more complicated than that. Maybe this is being typed by a human but being checked by a crowd of anonymous people embedded in a piece of software.
That’s actually the more likely scenario. Have a quick Google for an MIT project called Soylent. It describes itself as a "word processor with a crowd inside". A few years ago, Amazon developed Mechanical Turk – a system that lets you commission tiny bits of work from online workers scattered around the world. Small tasks are parcelled out to people at the other end of an internet connection and they get micro-payments for their digital labour. Soylent builds on that to extend the tools available inside Microsoft Word – giving it the ability to do real proofreading, real editing, to get actual people to check your document. So you don’t get those tin-eared green and red lines appearing under some perfectly correct statement or completely cromulent word. You get real humans reading and correcting your document – but with the anonymity and distance of a mechanical, software-based process.
Why would there ever be a finished set of copy? It could just mutate to reflect changing tastes and efficacy
You don’t have to imagine very hard to see where this might take us. Right now, it’s a document being crowd-checked for mistakes; pretty soon, it’s a piece of copy with thousands of people beefing up its persuasiveness. Type "My car is great" and watch it evolve into "The ultimatest driving machine" (there are bound to be teething problems). The first draft, the approvals, the research and the finished copy all living within the same macro on the same screen. Actually, why would there ever be a finished set of copy? It could just mutate to reflect changing tastes and efficacy. Maybe it will become self-aware and turn into a haiku before deleting itself in shame.
And just to be clear: I’m not software. If I were software, I’d have a thinner avatar.
Russell Davies is a creative director at Government Digital Services
@undermanager
This article was first published on campaignlive.co.uk
Additional Information
Latest jobs Jobs web feed
- Senior Account Manager fishtank 32k to 42k per year GBP, Maidenhead, Berkshire
- Graphic/Web Designer fishtank 17k to 27k per year GBP, United Kingdom
- ACCOUNT DIRECTOR/SENIOR ACCOUNT DIRECTOR - BTL/SP/Brand Experience - London - £45 - £55k plus bonus Judi Patton £45K-55K plus bonus, London/Greater London
- Digital Brand Manager Nike Europe Competitive + attractive relocation package for foreign hires, Amsterdam
- Head of Media, Marketing & Communications PGA Competitive, Sutton Coldfield, West Midlands
- senior planner > SPORTS BRANDS collectivo Up to £90,000 plus benefits, London
Most read
Most commented

BR Insight
Digital Integration: Connecting the Dots (Webcast) External website
Integrated digital marketing offers huge opportunities to engage, servic...
Internet Shopping: 6 Quick Wins to Revive Your Online Sales (Expert Reports) External website
With UK consumers spending an average of £1,083 a year online, int...
Conversational Mobile Marketing: Engage Customers and Empower Advocates (Expert Reports) External website
The pressure is on for marketers and mobile operators to embrace a strat...
Tablets: Redefining Consumer Experiences (Webcast) External website
As a nation, the UK is media and technology obsessed with over half of t...
Harness the Power of Your Customer's Digital Voice (Webcast) External website
All customers have the potential to become your brand advocates, driving...
Improving Marketing and Media Performance (Expert Reports) External website
A recent Brand Republic survey revealed that 78% of respondents felt und...









