
I wanna talk about Cameron’s The Terminator and Carpenter’s The Thing, but first, let’s get it out of the way —
If you know anything at all about me in this Current Era, it is that I am vehemently opposed to generative AI. I do not use it. I will not use it. It does not exist for me in any form — the only “use” I had of it recently was writing my Vital Cat Update, which copied from Google’s search engine AI off its main search page. Otherwise, I don’t touch the stuff. I don’t even know how to access it. I couldn’t tell you how to use Chat GPT or Claude or any of that. My copy of Word is one with Copilot not inside it, and I had to change my subscription to get there. I turn off Apple Intelligence in every instance I can. I am against AI because it steals our work, which it then uses to steal our jobs, which it further uses to steal our water and our electricity.
Which is to say, it is here to steal our future.
So, I’m against it! It sucks moist open ass.
But there’s a delightful (read: not at all delightful!!) new perniciousness afoot, and that requires us to talk a little about the novel Shy Girl, by an author who I won’t even name because whatever she did or did not do, I do not think directing theoretical harassment toward said author is really valuable, nor is it the point. The problem isn’t one book. The problem is the whole system.
To keep it as brief as I can, what happened was, to my understanding:
Shy Girl was a self-published novel. A horror novel. It came out a year or so ago, on its own, I think? It did well enough, I guess, though I don’t know that it set the world on fire — but somehow a publisher, Hachette, picked it up for traditional publication and it was to come out soon. Ten months ago, there appeared to be accusations that the book read like it was written by generative AI in whole or in part. Those conversations continued and appeared to boil over right around now-ish, and the current narrative is that the author did not herself use generative AI, but employed an editor who made changes to the book using generative AI, changes that the author did not — review? Did not catch? I don’t know for sure.
Certainly some aspect of this may be wrong, or new details may come out, and if you have corrective details, please sling ’em in the comments below.
That is the situation currently.
To switch tracks a bit, though you’ll soon see (or already can predict) where this is going: I’ve in the last several months seen an uncomfortable number of instances, usually on Threads, where someone will look at a photograph or a video or a piece or art or graphic design and they will assert, with dogmatic certainty, that is AI.
And sometimes, it is, or appears to be.
And other times, it definitely isn’t.
I’ve seen people look at a beautiful, very real but also very-processed photo, and say with their whole chest, that shit is AI, and sometimes that’s started a small little avalanche of people asserting similarly. And in more than one instance, I’ve seen the creator come back and post how that photo predates the current generation of gen-AI — it’s just a photo that looks either really good because of Lightroom or really overprocessed because someone wanted a slick HDR effect, or whatever.
This has also happened with writing.
It started with the emdash.
It was asserted, with Great Authority, that emdash use was a strong signifier of a piece of writing being AI.
The artbarf robots, they said, love that little emdash sumbitch so much, so so much, that they just can’t help themselves.
Needless to say, that made my bowels go to ice water because —
Holy shit, I love the emdash, too.
In fact, most Current Era writers I know love love love a fucking emdash.
But instead of making me sympathetic toward the artbarf robots — “Aww, it loves the same things I do!” — it only made me hate the artbarf robots more, because the reason the piece-of-shit AI loves an emdash is because it stole all our work, and all our work features a lot of goddamn emdashes.
It doesn’t use emdashes.
We use emdashes, and it stole our work and then mimics us.
Emdashes and all.
So now, with Shy Girl, what do I see?
I see some folks putting forth the “signs” that told them that Shy Girl was very obviously AI-written, and those signs include a number of stylistic choices.
And when I say stylistic choices, they are not choices that generative AI made, because generative AI doesn’t make choices. It just eats and regurgitates.
We make choices, as authors. Narrative ones, stylistic ones, and so forth.
But this list of signs and symptoms and AI portents included stylistic choices that I myself absolutely one hundred percent make. Same as the emdash. I’ve seen people say that AI loves metaphors, AI loves certain kinds of repetition, it loves adjectives no wait it loves adverbs no wait it loves alliteration no wait–
Of course, again, as with choices, AI doesn’t love a fucking thing, because AI isn’t alive, it isn’t intelligent, it isn’t aware. The key word is always artificial. It fakes it. It fakes choices. It fakes preferences. It fakes love. And it is able to fake it because it stole those choices and preferences from us.
I saw The Terminator last night on the big screen. I’ve seen it before, obviously — seen it many, many times. Seen all of them! Even the stinky ones. But I think this was my first seeing that one on the big screen. (It’s of course excellent, if occasionally a little corny and showing its age.)
But one place where it isn’t showing its age is how it still issues a sharp warning about AI — it’s long been held as a kind of bellwether for that particular threat, right? It’s an early iteration of the Torment Nexus meme. That warning has told us, hey, AI is going to get smart, get mean, it’s going to inhabit robots who want to kill us, it’s going to tangle itself up in our systems and decide that we’re a threat and drop a batch of nukes on our heads.
But I think one of the warnings in the movie(s) didn’t really register for me back then, but it damn sure registers now —
What happens in the movie? The AI is going to pretend to be us, and it’s going to be get harder and harder to tell the difference. It’s going to wear our faces. Only dogs will be able to sniff it out. It can steal our voices — so when we call home to talk to Mom, maybe the Mom we think we’re talking to us actually dead, and it’s a soulless Cyberdene drone on the other end there.
That makes me think of John Carpenter’s The Thing, because it, too, understands that same threat, but worse — it understands the fear of being amongst your people except one of those people isn’t your people. Ohhh, no. It’s an Impostor, an alien being clothed in the raiment of your friend’s flesh, and soon you’ll be paranoid about who is alien and who is human, and you’ll have to work very hard to find a way to figure out just who is who — all that without accidentally killing a friend, or failing to kill the thing that wants to eat your face and then wear it.
Sound familiar?
The AI — artistically! — is us.
It steals our artistic skin.
It wears it, pretends to be us.
And it gets harder and harder to tell what’s us, and what’s it.
I’ve long said that one of the threats of AI is that it damages the fidelity of our information. Of truth and reality itself! It’s not just that it pumps out misinformation and disinformation — digital illusion and virtual legerdemain! — but rather that its mere existence makes it harder and harder to tell what is truth and what is fiction.
And we’re seeing that now with Shy Girl.
We’re seeing it with photos and videos and artwork.
People are right to hate AI — and the pernicious, insidious presence of AI has made them like the men trapped in that Antarctic base.
They are paranoid that it’s everywhere.
Because, ostensibly, it is. Or they (they being the techbros who are really the man behind the wizard curtain) want it to be. And it has a deleterious, corrosive effect on all that we do and all that we see. It’s like Paramount taking over CBS, or Musk taking over Twitter — it doesn’t matter that it becomes successful, it just matters that they ruin the ability to disseminate good information. To ruin truth.
So, what the fuck do we do about all this?
I have no idea. I mean, the obvious thing on the face of it is to keep your own garden free of it. Pledge to use no AI. In all the ways you can avoid it? Avoid it. But that won’t stop someone in the future telling you you’re using it. Or even using an AI detector — which is itself AI! — from “detecting” it. And it won’t stop others from assuring you that this photo or that video or this logo is AI, even when it’s not. That certainty has been ruined.
More to the point, I don’t know what this means for writers, for readers, and for publishing at large. Ideally, publishing gets ahead of this problem and tries to get commitments from writers to not use AI — but therein lies a rub, too, wherein a “no AI” contract looks like a “morality clause.” Without clear definitions, if enough people were to accuse you and your book of being AI — whether at the authorial level, the editorial level, or in some aspect of publishing — they can get it tanked whether or not AI has ever even chastely kissed the work in question. And it doesn’t inspire confidence when a publisher like Hachette published Shy Girl… when already the accusations of AI were afoot. Did they do their due diligence? I don’t know. Maybe! But given the lack of editorial oversight… ennnh, maybe not.
Do I think AI should be published? I do not. I think using AI at any of those levels is not only problematic for the reasons listed above, it also takes opportunity from an Actual Human doing the Actual Work of Being Human. A contract given to some slopwrangler is a contract not given to an actual writer. A fake book will take the place of a real one. It’s stupid fucking robots all the way down when it should be humans.
So, this is a snarled nightmare tangle — one where the existence of AI en masse is becoming its own problem, regardless of whether it’s presence in a single instance of art of writing. We’re just going to have to do our best going forward. We must pledge not to use it — but also try to be very, very cautious kicking other people under the tires of this bus without knowing for absolute sure what we’re accusing someone of doing. As AI gets better, the environment in which it exists is only going to get noisier and more confusing. And we can’t just stick a copper wire into the blood of the book to make it transform into the monster, revealing its True Self.
We just gotta do our best. Be vigilant, be cautious.
And don’t use the AI slop-shitting artbarf techbro bullshit.
SIGH.
I do not care for this era of writing and publishing, lemme tell you.
The faster we pop this bubble, the better off we will all be.
Good luck, friends!
And fuck off, robots.
Buy my books or I die in the abyss.








terribleminds says:
(I should add here as a follow-up that Hachette, the publisher, appears to have dropped the author and the book from its publishing roster. What that means going forward, I dunno, and I’m honestly surprised it got as far as it did given the earlier accusations and editorial weirdness, but again, I’m not on the inside of that particular situation, so who knows?)
March 20, 2026 — 4:09 PM
debigliori says:
Yes. A thousand yesses. I won’t use it and moreover, I can’t take part in the settlement with Anthropic ( Bartz v Anthropic) because any settlement dollars are fucking tainted with the blood of children in Iran and Gaza where Claude has teamed up with Palantir and the Dept of War to do very bad things. What’re your thoughts on the settlement? Obvs your books will have been chewed up and ground into grey slop to train the LLM, but are you part of the class action?
March 20, 2026 — 4:20 PM
Ava Lynn Archer says:
AI has created such a tangled mess in the publishing industry. You’ve got some people brazenly using AI and admitting they do it to pump out a bajillion low-quality books each year—and they make bank doing it. You’ve got some people being canceled over unproven accusations of AI usage based on misunderstood facets of AI, like “em dashes are AI.” You’ve got the LLMs themselves training on copyrighted material without permission…
I don’t know about the Shy Girl situation in particular, but I can only see these kinds of “AI scandals” becoming more and more common. And it’s such a pity. AI should’ve been regulated from the outset, but of course, governments are so painfully slow to regulate any kind of tech, and with all the money these companies use to “lobby,” I can’t see that changing anytime soon.
It’s such a frustrating situation. :/
March 20, 2026 — 4:24 PM
Fatman says:
“You’ve got some people brazenly using AI and admitting they do it to pump out a bajillion low-quality books each year—and they make bank doing it.”
Eh. I’m a little skeptical of such claims. The evidence for authors “making bank” via mass-producing AI books is thus far nonexistent – or at least I’m not aware of any.
Books are not widgets. Readers have limited time to read and limited money to spend on books. The only authors making any money selling books are ones who already have a following, or (vanishingly rarely) develop one through promotion, word of mouth, etc. If no one’s reading your stuff to begin with, it really doesn’t matter all that much whether you produce 2 or 20 or 200 books per year.
Where I see the most negative impact from AI is in flooding an already oversaturated market with more crap-quality books. New authors will find it even harder to break out. The general reading public, turned off by a tide of badly written works, will become even more selective, or stop reading certain genres entirely.
This happened to horror fiction in the 1980s/90s. No AI involved. It took the genre decades to recover (I’d argue it never really did), and today it’s pretty niche.
AI “detection” is garbage and has been proven not to work. Anyone believing the results of an AI “detector” is basically a cargo cult believer. I don’t know what control we as a society can implement to counter the intrusion of AI into literature, but “detectors” ain’t it.
March 23, 2026 — 5:56 PM
terribleminds says:
Yeah, there’s not necessarily evidence of them making that bank — the woman profiled in the NYT a few weeks (months?) back basically makes money not through her books but through teaching others how to make money via slop. Basically a self-replicating bullshit machine.
March 24, 2026 — 8:31 AM
Alex Grecian says:
100%! And now I know I can change my Word subscription to get rid of copilot, so thanks for that!
March 20, 2026 — 4:27 PM
mangacat201 says:
Yes, this, a thousand times yes. But i also think we’re not yet talking enough about the next iteration of the problem – that there’s likely coming a time, pretty son where AI functions are in escapable in sso far that you’re going to be required to re-up the terms of service without a chance to opt out. And we’ll be forced to use AI (or not even told anymore where the AI is in the sauce) because it will be so baked into the foundations of the application that there’s no off-switch anymore apart from refusing the service at all. But what if there is no alternative lane offered? Increasingly online banking services phase out their desktop access protocolls completely or you can only access those with multiple-factor authentication via the app. You need a smartphone for that. Smartphones come with AI these days as standard. The AI is in the operating system and can’t be switched off or the 2GB bloatware will refuse to work at all. It’s crazy. I also don’t know the solution. But i feel like we’re going to have to keep talking about it, do our best to reduce our AI footprint and tell people about the detriments to society (and that there IS another way of doing things, you don’t have to resign yourself to its use, that’s what they want you to feel).
To the bubble pop. May they lose their fucking pretend money in one fell swoop and not get up again.
March 21, 2026 — 5:14 AM
Scott Semegran says:
Yes, yes, all YES! I don’t use AI at all for my books. I don’t even use Word’s grammar check, for crying out loud. Two of my novels are in the Anthropic AI database class action lawsuit, so the emdashes that they’re regurgitating are MY emdashes, too (I still fucking love an emdash)! For SHY GIRL, I guess I’m perplexed that it even got through that far in the editorial to the publication process. I think they were trying to stay on a supposed money train, but crashed into Uh-oh-ville. But the unfounded accusations that things are AI generated when they’re not, now that’s really scary. Good thing I have thousand of printed and yellowed manuscripts going back to when I was a wee writer. 🙂
March 20, 2026 — 4:30 PM
Dave says:
Going forward, for legal reasons, all authors shall retain a Git repository of their revisions starting from draft zero along with a safe containing all their handwritten notes.
Overkill? Yes. I expect to see it come up sooner or later anyway.
March 20, 2026 — 4:33 PM
neight says:
AI will certainly be able to fake up revisions and commit them over a period of a few months (parallelized by thousands of “authors”). Revision history, drafts, sketches, outlines, and any other digital artifact will just be another link in the chain that AIs will produce.
March 20, 2026 — 6:13 PM
Linda G. Hill says:
As an author and an editor, I’m horrified by the “Shy Girl” debacle. As a human, I hate that AI has caused me to question everything I see, hear, and read. You’re right, it’s a complete shitshow. Thanks for the article.
March 20, 2026 — 4:50 PM
Samuel Johnston says:
As a fellow em dash enjoyer, I feel your pain. Our greatest punctuation has been weaponized against us.
I think one of the reasons AI can be so insidious is that this artificial system is very good at activating our natural human compulsion to anthropomorphize. The same hind-brain process that sees a face in an oddly-shaped rock or moth’s wings, the process that recognizes emotional responses in the subtle expressions of other people and animals—the engine of our ability to empathize—is hijacked by a machine that places one word after another.
The great failing of the Turing test was not recognizing how good we are at projecting our own inner worlds onto everything around us. We automatically imagine feeling, thought, and intent behind those artificially generated words, even though it is no more meaningful than the angry expression on that rock. There is magic in that human ability, but now it works against us.
I worry that ubiquitous AI will force us to suppress this part of ourselves as a defense mechanism; force us to harden our hearts and carefully analyze every image, every word, in a vain attempt to recognize whether there is anything human in it, or if we’re just playing Tom Hanks to AI’s Wilson.
March 20, 2026 — 4:54 PM
Sally Bahner says:
To quote from another movie, “I’m too old for this sh*t.” In other words, no way will I touch AI in my writing!
March 20, 2026 — 5:40 PM
Robin Facer says:
Yep. Yep. Yep.
Tangentially, I was the Assistant Editor on a film produced by Robert Patrick
(And 2 others) in the mid-90s.
I was the only woman on the post-production team, and the only person regularly in the production office until 10pm. One night, after I had left, the place was broken into. Everyone was worried about me being there alone after dark. I insisted that I had a job to do. Patrick’s solution? He brought me a baseball bat. “Keep it next to you,” he said. “Just in case.”
An absolute classic, that guy.
March 20, 2026 — 5:43 PM
Greg says:
Wonderful essay, or whatever we are calling this form of writing. I avoid “AI” as well. But I was wondering, while reading this, if some intrepid researcher could have an AI produce content for other AI to digest and use to create more content. And then look at the results 100 or 1000 iterations later. I don’t think that the final products would be anything other than incomprehensible dreck, but it might be interesting to do.
March 20, 2026 — 6:07 PM
Adam says:
I thought it was en dashes. Supposedly.
Which nobody better come for mine. Just sayin.
March 20, 2026 — 6:13 PM
Tad Marshall says:
Thanks, I enjoyed reading that! As a former software developer, I am looking at today’s AI as something evolving rapidly (The Thing) and also as something between a Super Power (write code 100 times faster!) and a complete replacement for my skill set (Terminator). Even a little “help” when coding starts to eat at skills. When I copy and paste code and the editor fixes up the indentation so it always matches my style that seems kind of cool. When it takes my three word comment and suggests an additional 75 words I might want to add I get really annoyed.
March 20, 2026 — 6:48 PM
Susan M. Gourley says:
I have great fears about AI and where it is going. My oldest son and I have joked about Skynet for years, but it’s no longer funny. Even more than my own concerns as a writer and reader is the education of our young people. Education policy has a long history of adopting new ‘things’ before understanding how it will work in the long term.
I don’t expect publishers to ask for promises to not use AI. I see a future where AI replaces writers so the publishers no longer have to pay royalties at all. I see a nearer future where publishers use it for editing, promotion, and social media content.
Where is Sarah Connor when we need her?
March 20, 2026 — 9:22 PM
Mary Joan McCarthy says:
He was born in 1920 and he warned us that robots could be evil. We didn’t have to wait for James Cameron to plop it in front of our faces. Isaac Asimov was so ahead of his time. What infuriates me is that AI could have had a set of rules written into the programming but the tech giants didn’t think of that. Or maybe they did and just wanted to screw us all big time. May they all be obliterated by the very machines they invented. Now I’m off to think of the most gruesome way possible for a computer to commit a slow and painful murder.
March 20, 2026 — 9:35 PM
rafinley says:
Thank you for this, as always. I appreciate your clarity and the connection to the movies which did warn us (and apparently inspired a greedy few).
As I was reading, I saw a scene in my head and might even manage to write it (especially as I’m doing fear-based avoidance of working on my next self-pub). I’ll keep it vague, but hey, if someone else wants to run with the concept, why the hell not.
“I saw Goody Proctor using AI!”
March 21, 2026 — 1:04 AM
Surekha Davies says:
Thank you, thank you, for all your outspoken truths about ecocide-plagiarism-psychosis-surveillance-radioactive waste machines! Getting the word out – and explaining the nuances of the problems that genAI causes – is vital. You frame a fundamental problem and undergirds all the problems:
“It’s not just that it pumps out misinformation and disinformation … but rather that its mere existence makes it harder and harder to tell what is truth and what is fiction.”
March 21, 2026 — 2:49 AM
Kyle Reese says:
I’m an old git. I’ve been scribbling my heart out all my life. I’d love to be published and have just this year submitted my first novel to agents.
Ironically, these days, my biggest fear is not that I’ll be thought an untalented writer, but that someone might think I’ve used AI to create my novel! Even though I actively avoid its use. Because, as you’ve touched on in your post, there’s nothing I can do about it once the finger is pointed, true or false.
Once that flamethrower is turned on you, you’re dead, whether the Thing has its talons in you or not.
The love of writing is a scary thing these days.
March 21, 2026 — 8:29 AM
KT Grant says:
Been reading about this. Did the author use AI to self publish her book, and if so did no one complain then? How did she get a publishing deal in the first place if she used AI to self publish?. Other readers who read her other self published book says it reads like AI wrote it. Such a WTF.
March 21, 2026 — 11:15 AM
Lisa Rull says:
Excellent piece. I can only apologise profusely for how hung up I am on the distracting fact that your chosen headline image DEFINITELY comes from Terminator 2: Judgement Day. (The second image COULD come from that first film, but more likely ALSO comes from T2). As someone who has littered many pieces of writing with those beloved parenthetical em-dashes — so handy for clarifying my rambling arguments! — I wanted to get past the distraction, but couldn’t.
So I’ll just say thank you and that I’m absolutely with your argument that “the reason the piece-of-shit AI loves an emdash is because it stole all our work, and all our work features a lot of goddamn emdashes.”
March 21, 2026 — 11:44 AM
terribleminds says:
Yes, the first image is T2 — the second, from the first. The T2 image is on point — it’s the scene where the mother is on the phone, but it’s not the mother, but rather, the Terminator.
March 22, 2026 — 10:18 AM
Dr Lisa Rüll says:
Absolutely! It is the BEST choice. How’s Wolfie?
March 22, 2026 — 11:30 AM
terribleminds says:
.. Wolfie? Is that another of my cats?
March 23, 2026 — 1:14 PM
Laura says:
It’s bad out there. My boss is thinking about drumming up some “training” for us. And in the same damn breath he tells us AI is coming for our jobs. He’s got the naive belief that if we can’t beat them, we should join them.
It’s the Borg. It’s 7 of 9 (6 7 was probably made by AI and not human children — haha?)
There’s a bean counter who runs all of my team’s writing through AI. My boss tells us to do it before the bean counter does. And that is a big, fat joke. AI “corrects AI.”
I retire in July.
March 21, 2026 — 1:36 PM
Lyse says:
Love your AI ranty posts. It makes me feel like I’m not alone. Thank you.
What a shitshow, right? It’s infuriating as it could (read: should) have been handled so differently. Not only from the techbro side, or the legal side, but also from the user side. Anyway… spilt milk and all that.
I’m hopeful (gotta cling to something) that there’ll be a rise in No-AI products. Libra Office doesn’t have AI build into it, and Scrivener takes a stand against AI, there’s none in its software, and doesn’t allow backend scraping for data. Love Scrivener.
I’ve turned off all the AI BS in my various Apple devices. For those that don’t know… Go into the settings under “Apple Intelligence and Siri” and turn off all of that shit. I’ve also gone into each app and turned it off at the app level. (Don’t trust that turning it off with one button turns everything off) It’s shocking how much time it takes to tell AI to Fuck Off. (Also shocking how many apps I have??)
Fight the good fight, brother! Keep the conversation going and the possible solutions flowing. (And the rants. I do love the rants.)
March 21, 2026 — 3:48 PM
Kaija says:
Well said. I hadn’t heard about SHYGIRL, but I left trad pub years ago because of the harassment.
I’m virulently against AI in any form and very outspoken about it. Three of my books are in Anthropic’s disaster. My income from my writing has tanked so badly I’m going to have to stop doing it professionally unless something changes.
And people can pry my em and en dashes from my cold, dead, decaying fingers.
March 21, 2026 — 5:51 PM
Gloria says:
I am neurodivegent and I enjoy writing, a lot, have written a few books and really love it. I felt like I could really tell stories, do something with them. A couple years ago, I felt confident enough to work on a short story for months, and submit it to a magazine, one of the big, respectable ones everyone knows.
Their reply was not that it was rejected, or that it was not good enough. They said my submission was very obviously written by AI and that because of that they were putting my name on a “do not publish” list.
I get its not that serious but that message, paired with all my communicating and social issues really hurt my faith in myself and in the way I write. I’m still trying to fix the damage.
March 23, 2026 — 7:28 AM
mattw says:
I just wonder how it got as far as it did, a month away from hitting shelves in the US and already out in the UK, without Hachette picking up on any of the AI stuff? Did they just ignore it? Were they too busy looking at potential dollar signs? One article I read said the author was going to sue, but didn’t say who she was going to sue or on what grounds. And if the editor is at fault for using AI to do the edits, did the author not review them? There are so many pieces of the puzzle left out of the information that’s available so far.
Do I need to save all the hand-written pages of my current WIP to prove it’s not AI?
March 23, 2026 — 12:40 PM
Teddy R. says:
As someone with ADHD—who often has side thoughts or clarifying examples that I like to include mid-sentence—I love using em dashes. I’ve written like that for years—decades, even—and it is super frustrating that all of a sudden I’ve had people start assuming my writing is AI-generated. Heck, I even have the Alt code memorized (Alt+0151). That’s how often I use them.
And recently, I’ve even had people in professional settings ask if I used AI just because I did things like use the subjective verb case correctly (they didn’t know how so it “looked weird” to them), bounced back and forth between “logon” (noun, as in a logon screen) and “log on” (verb, to log on to a site using your logon credentials) and they thought it should always just be one word, or because I used “X rays” (noun, capital X, no hyphen) and “x-ray” (adjective, lower-case, hyphen) in the same sentence and “only AI would make that mistake” and “I should have caught that” (“the x-ray machine generated powerful X rays”).
(Admittedly, in the latter case, people have started hyphenating X-rays as a noun more and more, but the old rule was that you didn’t—just like “radio-wave technologies like WiFi use radio waves” and “gamma-wave detectors detect gamma waves.” When the compound noun is used as a compound adjective, it is hyphenated, but not as a noun. I think it must be the single letter that creates the impulse to always include the hyphen in “X-rays” no matter how it is being used.)
But it is super weird that I live in a world where using proper grammar now makes everyone think I am a machine, but were I to type “going 2 store need anything im thinking nachoes for dinner again lol” then everyone would look at it and go “now THAT is a human!” *sigh*
I swear, if they come after my Oxford comma next…let’s just say things will get ugly—pedantic, hostile, and ugly…
March 29, 2026 — 3:25 AM