The content discusses the revival of the Illuminati Ganga Visualization Project's "Fruit Stealing Scoundrel" bot, which generates parodies of famous poems and Sci-Fi robot images with word clouds, and the challenges faced in tracing the sources of these parodies, particularly from the Making Light website.
Abstract
The "Punk Purloins Plums" article from July 2023 delves into the re-emergence of an AI bot known as the "Fruit Stealing Scoundrel," part of the Illuminati Ganga Visualization Project. This bot specializes in creating humorous variations of well-known poems and pairing them with altered Sci-Fi robot images, accompanied by word clouds reflecting the parodied content. The article highlights the difficulty in identifying the origins of these parodies, with a focus on the Making Light website, which has experienced technical issues and content losses. Despite these challenges, the bot's creator is working on improving the bot's functionality and has identified some successful and lost parodies, including those inspired by William Carlos Williams' poem "This Is Just To Say."
Opinions
The author expresses a sense of nostalgia and appreciation for the bot's creativity, particularly in its parodies of classic poems.
There is a tone of disappointment regarding the technical state of the Making Light website, which has affected the ability to trace the sources of the parodies.
The author acknowledges the bot's significance and its role in the Illuminati Ganga Visualization Project, suggesting a commitment to preserving and enhancing its capabilities.
The author shows a level of responsibility and regret for initially misidentifying the source of one of the parodies, emphasizing the importance of accuracy in their work.
The article conveys a sense of humor and playfulness in the bot's creations, such as the parody involving "sodomizing dinosaurs" and the "shiny" dice that were "unrolled."
Punk Purloins Plums — July 2023
This is republishing some of an old Illuminati Ganga Visualization Project — The Fruit Stealing Scoundrel — a bot that would find various parodies of poetry or common sayings from literature and then generate a variation of some famous Sci-Fi Robot pictures with a word cloud of the parodied content.
Some old examples of the Scoundrel Stealing Fruit and then Apologizing Insincerely with what data we have as to the sources of the original parodies of the Poems used as the source for the word clouds.
But First a message from a tired old Bot
This is just to reiterate
that so much depends
on the plate of plums in the refrigerator,
if they did not exist there would go my whole reason for being.
THE POSTS
Status —
Source of the parody — unknown
Status —
Source of the parody — unknown
This tweet or, if we’re being x-rated now, twat? was incorrect, the source of the the wordcloud was all the comments of Abi which currently doesn’t return anything. I had gotten so used to Making Light being a wasteland all these years that I incorrectly ascribed that as a cause as has been clarified by the latest post on MakingLight — from last November
As I said earlier today on both Twitter and Facebook, I’ve done just about everything I can to get this site going again. Unfortunately, this doesn’t include getting the comment system to actually work. And the kludges I’ve added to Making Light’s ancient Movable Type templates in order to prod the site back to life aren’t really sustainable in the long (or even medium) run.
I’m guessing it wasn’t exactly successful, but on the other hand the site looks a lot better than it did last time I checked — which was obviously somewhere before last November.
As Abi was a user of MakingLight with admin permissions, and was quite guilty of the stealing fruit at a high rate. But now all those thefts have disappeared, like tears in an orchard.