Not by LLMs.
most people are forgotten. you will be forgotten.
>>25383136Any way around this?
>>25383119the universe doesn't forget
>>25383723Set up a web3 memorial to yourself that randomly pings various ip addresses.Some sysadmin 300 years from now might look up the originating address and find your memorial. Then he will post about it on neo-reddit r/wholesomeasf_ck (the UN made all swearing illegal in 2242) and get updoots from a jeet on his neo-coffee break who now looks stereotypically Aryan because of widespread genetic engineering.
>>25383119>go to thrift store book section>literal endless new titles and authors I’ve never seen and never will again>it’s literally that easy to write and publish a book>no one on /lit/ does it
Almost everything is forgotten, and almost everything should be forgotten. Imagine the sheer smothering overload of information if everything was remembered.
>>25383769Used book stores are a goldmine of forgotten works. I'll look for interesting titles, read the back-cover blurb, and if the price is right, I'll buy it. I've found several lost classics that way.>no one on /lit/ [writes or publishes books]I beg to differ. https://lampbylit.com/magazine/authors/
>>25383130kek
>>25383723Never die in the first place
>>25383769>>no one on /lit/ does itMeanwhile, in reality, /lit/ has been publishing novels for years and is currently undergoing a renaissance. see: >>25386029
>>25383723people only forget because they know youghostmaxx from the start and the problem disappearst. Anonymous
"significance that each has lived, the other to detectdiscovery not God Himself could now annihilate"-Emily Dickinson