<https://www.theguardian.com/books/2023/aug/09/amazon-removes-books-generated-by-ai-for-sale-under-authors-name>

Five books for sale on Amazon were removed after author Jane Friedman 
complained that the titles were falsely listed as being written by her. The 
books, which Friedman believes were written by AI, were also listed on the 
Amazon-owned reviews site Goodreads.

“It feels like a violation, because it’s really low quality material with my 
name on it,” Friedman told the Guardian. The Ohio-based author has written 
several books about the publishing industry, and the fraudulent titles mimicked 
her real work. How to Write and Publish an eBook Quickly and Make Money and A 
Step-by-Step Guide to Crafting Compelling eBooks, Building a Thriving Author 
Platform, and Maximizing Profitability were two of the listed books. Friedman’s 
real books include The Business of Being a Writer and Publishing 101.

One of the falsely attributed books’ descriptions read: “This book offers 
practical strategies, tips, and techniques to help writers streamline their 
writing process, accelerate their eBook publication timeline, and maximize 
their earning potential.”



Jane Friedman. Photograph: Ross Van Pelt

Friedman was first made aware of the scam titles through a reader who noticed 
the listings on Amazon and emailed her after suspecting that the books were 
fraudulent. “It looks terrible. It makes me look like I’m trying to take 
advantage of people with really crappy books,” she said.

Having had experience with AI tools such as ChatGPT, which is designed to 
provide humanlike responses to user commands, Friedman immediately thought the 
books were AI-generated after reading the first few pages. “I’ve been blogging 
since 2009 – there’s a lot of my content publicly available for training AI 
models,” the author wrote on her website.

The books were “if not wholly generated by AI, then at least mostly generated 
by AI”, Friedman said. She began looking for ways to get the titles taken down 
immediately and submitted a claim form to Amazon. Yet according to Friedman, as 
she had not trademarked her name, Amazon told her it would not remove the books.

However, the books had been taken down from both Amazon and Goodreads by 
Tuesday, which Friedman suspects is due to her speaking out about the issue on 
social media. “Unless Amazon puts some sort of policy in place to prevent 
anyone from just uploading whatever book they want and applying whatever name 
they want, this will continue, it’s not going to end with me,” said Friedman. 
“They have no procedure for reporting this sort of activity where someone’s 
trying to profit off someone’s name.” On her blog, she called on the sites to 
“create a way to verify authorship”.

Fraudulent titles have been listed on Amazon in the past. In 2018, business 
writer Patrick Reames said that a scammer had used his social security number 
to pose as him and publish a book under his name.

When asked about Friedman’s case, an Amazon spokesperson told the Guardian: “We 
have clear content guidelines governing which books can be listed for sale and 
promptly investigate any book when a concern is raised. We welcome author 
feedback and work directly with authors to address any issues raised. We invest 
heavily to provide a trustworthy shopping experience and to protect customers 
and authors from misuse of our services.”

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