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roenxi 5 hours ago

I don't know how much of a smoking gun this actually is, the evidence proffered doesn't establish anything - I can see some names there like Havilah Brooks or Celina Briar who are intentionally re-using the same title to create a series, for example. And this doesn't really get into the base rate of generic title re-use among encyclopedias. There isn't much reward for coming up with an imaginative title for kids, they're not very experienced. I'd have no trouble believing publishers come up with very similarly titled books in the kids encyclopedia all the time, they already recycle plots like there is no yesterday in fantasy.

I think the article's point is probably sound to some great extent, but I would believe I owned a book with a title like "100,000 Whys" when I was young. With a dinosaur and a rocket on the front. I loved dinosaurs and rockets, they're even still cool today.

supriyo-biswas 4 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Have you seen the content of the books in the tweet[1] linked below the article? Between horses with fused butts and other diagrams that don't say as much as they purport to, the cover is the least of its problems, although the only one that can be criticized directly.

[1] https://infosec.exchange/@lcamtuf/116785283147249092

roenxi 3 hours ago | parent [-]

This seems to be some out of context pictures where I have no idea what they are meant to be showing or whether they succeeded. And although the cats and zebras are clear AI images again that doesn't mean anything, being exactly 2 pictures presented with no context apart from being seen in a book. So there is a book where the editor was lazy and let some bad AI images through.

I'm sure someone deeply familiar with childrens publishing would be able to talk authoritatively on the extent of new trends, but this seems to be the infosec community and the evidence offered doesn't seem to actually be evidence of anything. There isn't a baseline. Children's encyclopedias might have been a hard-hitting game of radical creativity and high standards in the past, or it could be an endless tide of derivative swill.

And using AI images seems unrelated. That's something people should just be doing. Ideally with better proofreading, but hey. The article's complaint was about lack of originality.

aix1 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Did you see what's inside one of those books?

https://infosec.exchange/@lcamtuf/116785283147249092

This is Amazon #1 bestseller in "Children's Encyclopedias"!