Disagreement: The Art of Losing with Dignity

By: A.B. Timothy

If you are a follower of my X account, you may have seen a drama play out on the TL recently. I had a fellow Author, Ryan Williamson (who you might remember from my back and forth with him about A.I. a few weeks ago), block me. It is always disheartening when someone blocks you who you thought of as a peer.

If you wish to read through it, you can see my thread about the drama here. Ultimately, I believe I won because I supported my side of the argument the best. I gave him evidence and asked him questions, neither of which he could answer, instead resorting to the playground-esque behavior of name-calling and cursing.

In the end, he decided to block me instead of continuing the conversation for reasons I can’t pretend to know. Though I would imagine it had to do with either boredom or wounded pride. This is an issue. While yes, the internet is great because you can pick and choose who you interact with, it shows a lack of character on the part of the blocker to block someone because you got annoyed at their response to you. It is basically plugging your ears and saying “La la la.” Because you are done talking with someone.

Now, I have lost my fair share of internet arguments in my time. I even raised the white flag in the back-and-forth Ryan and I had the other week. But what you don’t do, after losing an argument, if you wish to be seen as mature, is block the interlocutor and ignore them.

I understand that religion is a touchy topic for everyone, and it can make emotions run hot very fast, but part of maturity is your command over your own emotions.

So what do you think? Let me know in a comment below or in a reply on X. Give this page a follow if you are looking for inspiration and fun short stories. Also, check out the Newsletter Page to subscribe to receive this week’s Newsletter, which comes out today!

Transparency: AI vs Ghosts

By: A.B. Timothy

The other day, I responded to one of Ryan Williamson’s articles about AI. He was gracious enough to respond to my response in an article of his own. In that article, he talked a lot about the need for transparency and how the issue was not the use of A.I. alone, but rather the lack of transparency. Below I have written my reply to his reply.

Raising the Flag of Truce

Hey Ryan,

Another great article. It is clear from your work that you are so very well written and—I would have to assume—read in this area. You have written several articles (just referring to the ones you mentioned in your post, not including the ones I don’t know about, of which there are undoubtedly many) on the issue of A.I. in creative works, and you have a breadth of personal experience with this technology. I ultimately agree on many of your takes and am willing to let bygones be bygones on the points we still don’t see eye-to-eye on. I have no plans to “boycott” anything you write, as you have assured me (and I take your word as your honor) that all of the actual meat of your work is human.

There are some things I wanted to bring up for further discussion, however:

You brought up, several times, the need for complete transparency in literature, and I have to wonder, what does that mean for Pen Names? I myself write under a pen name, though I do not hide behind anonymity, using my real face as my public profile picture, linking my real name public X account to my author X account via a post I made almost a month ago. I just do not feel the need to tell each individual about my “real” life. Similarly, I would not lie if someone asked me about my use of AI or Grok, but I don’t feel the need to announce it. This plays into your points about ghost writing and my use of A.I. as a marketing advisor.

On Ghost Writing…

There is a marked difference between using A.I. to write your prose as opposed to hiring a human ghost writer. A.I. is trained on millions of words of other authors’ work, and in many cases, this data has been taken without the permission or payment given to the original authors. A human ghost writer, however, while likely also having been trained on millions of words of other authors material, is using their human faculties to correlate and process that data after, in most cases, they have consumed that data through ethical and reasonable means.

I do not like your idea that this argument is on the same level as “throw away your computer because it was made with blood-cobalt.” That offense, of these foreign nations profiting off of slave or inhumanly-paid labor, is much, much worse than someone reading a pirated book. But if you look at the markets right now, who is demanding the most of those inhumanely collected resources? It’s not the public market, it’s not you or me, it’s A.I. companies. So, continued use of A.I. and support given to these companies is a double sin in this comparison.

Thus, here too, I bring you the offer of a draw, I don’t lecture you about using A.I. you don’t lecture me about typing on blood-cobalt (which also powers your A.I. data-centers).

Arguably, a human ghost writer avoids a number of these issues as it is (in most cases) an adult human being paid for the art they have chosen to create and give up rights to.

On A.I. Marketing

While I understand that A.I. in all forms of art will continue to improve year over year, this attitude that you seem to have of just throwing up our hands and saying, “It will only get better,” is one I cannot agree to. To simply watch the age of men die and do nothing as it burns repulses me. I understand, as you said in your article, you do not view this struggle as poetic or spiritual as I do, and that’s okay; not everyone has to see everything the same way.

A.I. art has gotten good. I won’t sit here and claim it hasn’t because that would be a lie, even the book cover you use in your original post is a great example of A.I. art that can fool the masses and even impress the informed. However, I need to ask, would you have bought that book if you knew the artist went to such lengths to lie about having created that image themselves? You might answer yes, and that’s your choice, but morally (again, I understand morality has little to do with the marketing game as it’s played today, as you pointed out), I couldn’t stand by it. Now, would I go through the hassle of trying to return the book and get a refund if I had already bought it under false pretenses? No. I’ll be honest and say it would not be worth that much of a hassle for me.

Marketing materials as a whole? Go nuts, man. I can’t stop you, and I probably will end up using some of them myself (for the free things.) I think that is where I draw the line. You drew the line at the end product must be a creation of the credited author, SPOT ON! But, I would further that line by saying: the end product is whatever the consumer spent their money on. If I am selling stickers at a booth alongside my book at a con, I would want those stickers to have art drawn and created by paid artists. If part of my marketing is my book cover (which it has to be), I would insist that the art featured there on, must be from a paid human artist.

The prose within the pages of the book goes without saying.

But, free things, like marketing posts on Social Media, blurb art for my blog (See the placeholder art for The Shards of Arthur’s Shield over on my Novels page). Things that cost the consumer no money to see and might only help push people towards my artist-produced work, yeah I don’t mind using A.I. for that.

At the end of the day, I think you said it best when you said “[A.I. Marketing Materials and Human Art] are [both] legitimate business decisions.”

A Final Olive Branch

Here is my idea, and something that people could start working towards in politics:

Art, broadly, already has the Copyright Protection Act to help protect it against theft and redistribution. What if human art had a similar thing? What if there were a Human Art Act, an act of government meant to protect human artists and to help push them? It could put coal at the feet of Social Media companies to start cracking down on art that does not meet a certain threshold of humanity, and could force them to cut down on the artificial slop. Now you made a great point in your article that KDP already had an overwhelming amount of human slop thrown at it year-round, but that is, in my opinion, no reason to just open the flood gates and let loose the A.I. hoardes.

This idea of protecting human art (which would not be perfectly air-tight just as the CPA is not), is something that I would like to imagine we could agree on. The only issue I could see you having with this is the reversing of some of the democratization of marketing you talked about in your article.

This last thing was just something cool I’ve thought of and would love to get your thoughts on it as an A.I. Professional.

Farewell

Thank you for the great dialogue and your very thorough response to my response to your response. I wish you well and pray for the health of your loved ones,

A.B. Timothy, Author

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A Response to Ryan Williamson’s 10/31 AI Discussion

By: A.B. Timothy

On October 31st, 2025, Ryan Williamson, a fellow writer and someone I would consider a peer, both here on WordPress and on X, posted an article on his WordPress entitled, “Far More Authors Than You Think Are Using AI—Guess How Many Won’t Admit It?” There, he discussed the growing trend in the use of Generative AI amongst writers. I originally meant for this “article” to be a comment on his blog, but it grew too big. So here it is instead:

Hey Ryan,

Great Article, man, very articulate and well thought out from the perspective of someone pro the new technology.

I, as I have mentioned on X, have used Grok (an X-based LLM) recently to help me brainstorm ideas to grow and expand my reach on X and grow my audience. This has helped. I’ve gained several followers, I changed my bio, and have been able to put out many copies of my Free Chapter to new followers. And I have begun engagement-hooking, with images and written hooks for RT’s and Replies. I’ve only begun building momentum with these “tricks” all at the suggestion of Grok. I’ve never taken anything from Grok directly, only used him as a backboard to bounce ideas off of and look for tips.

I say all of that so you know that when I say this next part, I understand that it might be seen as throwing stones from a glass house, on my part. I think a lot of readers have AI trust issues. By that, I am referring to your Spock meme in this post. It may be illogical (it is), but humans are illogical creatures. When I hear a writer has gone ahead and outlined their story with AI or allowed the AI to write portions of it for them, I don’t like it. When writers and artists hide their usage of AI, and then it is revealed that they used AI, I feel betrayed.

Paul Atredies Glimpsing the Golden Path

I imagine this feeling of betrayal is something not unique to me. I believe many others undergo it too. This whole conversation of AI versus humans is something that I have given much thought to. For this reason, I have chosen to pay a non-insignificant amount to a human artist who has been commissioned by people I trust (and who I believe is a peer of ours on X), to create the cover for my debut novel. I want as much humanity in my stories as possible. I see a golden path for humanity, but in only mere glimpses. When it graces my sight, I set my heading for that impossible star, and sail in search of a dawn I only pray will come one day.

Does this mean I think creativity is cooked? No. I believe even if we artists fail today, and the industry is wiped out by gleaming-enticing-objectively “beautiful” piles of AI garbage, someone else, one day, will see the golden path again and lead a jihad in the name of humanity. The right to create, to express dominion over, and to rule God’s creation was given to us. Not the rocks we have tricked into thinking for us.

So, Ryan, thank you for making a thought-provoking article that inspired me to write this response. I pray for good health for your family and loved ones, and hope we can continue to pursue our creative endeavors as peers and men of quality.

With Respect and Humanity,
A.B. Timothy, Author

If you are reading this on my blog, go subscribe to Ryan’s blog over on Ryanwilliamson.com “Beyond the Margins” is always ripe for a good read.

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