AI pioneer and OpenAI cofounder Andrej Karpathy thinks AI can significantly improve how people read books. Amazon may already be thinking about how to do this for its Kindle ebooks business.
In a series of posts on X this week, Karpathy proposed building an AI application that can read books together with humans, answering questions and generating discussion around the content. He said it would be a "huge hit" if Amazon or some other company built it.
A recent job post by Amazon suggests the tech giant may be doing just that.
Amazon is looking for a senior applied scientist for the "books content experience" team who will be "leveraging advances in AI to improve the reading experience for Kindle customers," according to job post.
The goal is "unlocking capabilities like analysis, enhancement, curation, moderation, translation, transformation and generation in Books based on Content structure, features, Intent, Synthesis and publisher details," it added.
The role will not just focus on the reading experience but also the broader publishing and distribution space. The Amazon team wants to "streamline the publishing lifecycle, improve digital reading, and empower book publishers through innovative AI tools and solutions to grow their business on Amazon," the job post reads.
Amazon identified three major phases of the book lifecycle and sees AI potentially improving each one.
An Amazon spokesperson didn't immediately respond to a request for comment on Friday.
There seems to be huge demand for this type of service, based on the response to Karpathy's X post.
Stripe CEO Patrick Collison wrote under the post that it's "annoying" to have to build this AI feature on his own, and added that it will be "awesome when it's super streamlined."
Reddit cofounder Alexis Ohanian wrote, "I love this idea."
Do you work at Amazon? Got a tip?
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