JamesMartin
Sa souvraya niende misain ye
Staff member
Administrator
Inner Sanctum Nobility
♔ Champion ♔
Evening Sanctum,
We've had a couple of members ask questions regarding this in the last month, and I figured it made more sense to answer in one place than separately.
Especially since, upon reflection, we think this policy needs some added safeguards.
First, for those of you who use no AI at all, a quick disclaimer so you can skip the details which don't apply to you: Normal checks with Grammarly are not AI (their rewrite options are), spelling and grammar checkers on Google Docs or Microsoft Word are not AI, nor are the built-in ones that come with browsers. Google Translate is also not AI. None of what follows applies to any of these, at present (this might change in the future if these services try to force AI in, but we can hope for the best).
Now, for the actual policy.
1. As our rules already state, AI is not allowed, under any circumstances, to write posts for you.
2. We allow the use of AI tools for checking grammar, for translation and for basic editing
3. The use of these tools must be selective. Asking it to check for grammar errors is fine, asking it to reword a sentence or two you can't make work is fine. Putting an entire post of several hundred words into it and saying "rewrite this" is not. At that point, it is no longer an aid to improve your writing; it's just doing the writing for you.
4. The big change: Because there is very little way to tell the difference between an AI-written post and a sufficently AI-edited one, we've decided that we need to introduce a requirement that for any post where AI has been used in a meaningful way (meaning it has edited more than 25% of the total word count), you must keep a copy of the unedited version available for at least 3 months. How and where is up to you. You can put it in Google Docs, you can put it in your personal notepad here on site (yes, this feature exists), you can put it in a separate thread or anywhere else you care to name. What matters is that it is available to demonstrate that there was an original, pre-editing work that was your own.
5. We strongly encourage (but will not currently require) putting the unedited version of roleplay posts in a spoiler below the posted version. Right now, we feel like this is a fair option for people who want to use these tools but still hold themselves accountable.
6. Event posts and Challenge entries will be checked as a matter of course. While they are at little risk of winning, given the poor quality of AI writing, it's still fundamentally unfair to award the same badges to AI entries as to those who participated and put effort in
7. These changes are not retroactive. They will apply only to things posted from tomorrow onwards.
As a personal aside, beyond the policy changes: For those who do want to use these tools for grammar and rewording, while I understand the impulse, as someone who has been writing most of his life and running this site for nearly a decade, I strongly recommend learning from the limitations of these tools. They are, without exception, bland and uninteresting writing that obeys the technicalities of grammar with no understanding of how to work within those rules to create something greater than the sum of its parts. If your goal is to become better (and I sincerely hope that is the goal of anyone who writes on this site), I would suggest that, whatever your use of AI, you take what it gives you as a bland, technically competent baseline and improve on it from there.
This will hopefully be our last word on the subject for a while, but the tech landscape is changing and we might need to update our rules further in the future. Unfortunately, this is very much a situation where a few bad apples will spoil the barrel.
As always, questions, comments, concerns and the various ways in which you wish to #BlameJames can be posted below.
We've had a couple of members ask questions regarding this in the last month, and I figured it made more sense to answer in one place than separately.
Especially since, upon reflection, we think this policy needs some added safeguards.
First, for those of you who use no AI at all, a quick disclaimer so you can skip the details which don't apply to you: Normal checks with Grammarly are not AI (their rewrite options are), spelling and grammar checkers on Google Docs or Microsoft Word are not AI, nor are the built-in ones that come with browsers. Google Translate is also not AI. None of what follows applies to any of these, at present (this might change in the future if these services try to force AI in, but we can hope for the best).
Now, for the actual policy.
1. As our rules already state, AI is not allowed, under any circumstances, to write posts for you.
2. We allow the use of AI tools for checking grammar, for translation and for basic editing
3. The use of these tools must be selective. Asking it to check for grammar errors is fine, asking it to reword a sentence or two you can't make work is fine. Putting an entire post of several hundred words into it and saying "rewrite this" is not. At that point, it is no longer an aid to improve your writing; it's just doing the writing for you.
4. The big change: Because there is very little way to tell the difference between an AI-written post and a sufficently AI-edited one, we've decided that we need to introduce a requirement that for any post where AI has been used in a meaningful way (meaning it has edited more than 25% of the total word count), you must keep a copy of the unedited version available for at least 3 months. How and where is up to you. You can put it in Google Docs, you can put it in your personal notepad here on site (yes, this feature exists), you can put it in a separate thread or anywhere else you care to name. What matters is that it is available to demonstrate that there was an original, pre-editing work that was your own.
5. We strongly encourage (but will not currently require) putting the unedited version of roleplay posts in a spoiler below the posted version. Right now, we feel like this is a fair option for people who want to use these tools but still hold themselves accountable.
6. Event posts and Challenge entries will be checked as a matter of course. While they are at little risk of winning, given the poor quality of AI writing, it's still fundamentally unfair to award the same badges to AI entries as to those who participated and put effort in
7. These changes are not retroactive. They will apply only to things posted from tomorrow onwards.
As a personal aside, beyond the policy changes: For those who do want to use these tools for grammar and rewording, while I understand the impulse, as someone who has been writing most of his life and running this site for nearly a decade, I strongly recommend learning from the limitations of these tools. They are, without exception, bland and uninteresting writing that obeys the technicalities of grammar with no understanding of how to work within those rules to create something greater than the sum of its parts. If your goal is to become better (and I sincerely hope that is the goal of anyone who writes on this site), I would suggest that, whatever your use of AI, you take what it gives you as a bland, technically competent baseline and improve on it from there.
As a personal note separate from any policy updates: if you’re using these tools for grammar fixes or rewording, I get why—they’re convenient. But as someone who’s spent most of his life writing and nearly a decade running this site, I’d urge you to pay attention to what these tools can’t do. Their output is consistently flat, technically correct but devoid of the nuance, rhythm, and intention that make writing memorable. They follow rules without understanding how to bend or combine them to create something with real voice.
If your aim is to grow as a writer—and I genuinely hope that’s true for anyone posting here—treat AI output as a neutral, competent starting point. Then push past it. Shape it into something with personality, texture, and thought. That’s where the actual improvement happens.
If your aim is to grow as a writer—and I genuinely hope that’s true for anyone posting here—treat AI output as a neutral, competent starting point. Then push past it. Shape it into something with personality, texture, and thought. That’s where the actual improvement happens.
This will hopefully be our last word on the subject for a while, but the tech landscape is changing and we might need to update our rules further in the future. Unfortunately, this is very much a situation where a few bad apples will spoil the barrel.
As always, questions, comments, concerns and the various ways in which you wish to #BlameJames can be posted below.

