Disaster Hugo Administrators Resign in Wake of ChatGPT Controversy - The upcoming Seattle edition of the World Science Fiction Convention, or Worldcon, used AI to help vet program participants.


By Cheryl Eddy Published May 5, 2025

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Yoon Ha Lee's Moonstorm cover art

Another year, yet another Hugo Awards-adjacent controversy? That might be what fans of sci-fi lit and related media are thinking, with news today that a trio of leaders from the Seattle 2025 Worldcon, the upcoming iteration of the convention where the Hugos are annually presented, have resigned. This year, at least, the awards themselves—voted on by members of the World Science Fiction Society (WSFS)—seemingly aren’t directly involved in the dust-up.

In a post on Bluesky co-signed by Hugo administrator Nicholas Whyte, deputy Hugo administrator Esther MacCallum-Stewart, and World Science Fiction Society division head Cassidy, the trio announced they were resigning from their roles ahead of the Seattle event, which takes place in August. “We want to reaffirm that no LLMs or generative AI have been used in the Hugo Awards process at any stage,” the statement read in part, which might turn the heads of anyone who is a) interested in the Hugos, but b) not up on the latest controversy.

However, plenty of people in the community are well aware of what’s been going on. A quick journey to the blog File 770 will bring you up to speed, as will a visit to Seattle Worldcon 2025’s own site, which on April 30 shared a post clarifying exactly what role AI played in the upcoming event.

“We have received questions regarding Seattle’s use of AI tools in our vetting process for program participants,” Seattle Worldcon 2025 chair Kathy Bond wrote. “In the interest of transparency, we will explain the process of how we are using a Large Language Model (LLM). We understand that members of our community have very reasonable concerns and strong opinions about using LLMs. Please be assured that no data other than a proposed panelist’s name has been put into the LLM script that was used. Let’s repeat that point: no data other than a proposed panelist’s name has been put into the LLM script. The sole purpose of using the LLM was to streamline the online search process used for program participant vetting, and rather than being accepted uncritically, the outputs were carefully analyzed by multiple members of our team for accuracy.”

Bond’s post goes on to explain that “using this process saved literally hundreds of hours of volunteer staff time, and we believe it resulted in more accurate vetting after the step of checking any purported negative results. We have also not utilized an LLM in any other aspect of our program or convention.”

That last line is what today’s resignation post from Whyte, MacCallum-Stewart, and Cassidy also emphasized: that the Hugos themselves were not pulled into this process, which was meant to help Seattle Worldcon 2025 more efficiently compile the panels it offers to convention attendees.

Bond later posted an additional message on May 2, re-iterating her apology about using ChatGPT as part of the convention’s program vetting. “Additionally, I regret releasing a statement that did not address the concerns of our community,” she shared. “My initial statement on the use of AI tools in program vetting was incomplete, flawed, and missed the most crucial points. I acknowledge my mistake and am truly sorry for the harm it caused.”

However, as File 770 pointed out, the damage has apparently already been done: the use of ChatGPT in any capacity in connection to Worldcon created a furor on social media. It also inspired at least one Hugo nominee to remove their book from contention: Yoon Ha Lee, whose Moonstorm was named a Lodestar Award finalist, which honors YA releases. In a May 1 post on Bluesky, the author linked to the April 30 Worldcon blog post noted above, and noted he was withdrawing the title from consideration.

Then, in a post shared today responding to File 770’s latest post announcing the resignations, the author wrote “All respect and I’m grateful to them for their work, sorry [things] came to this pass.”

Seattle Worldcon 2025 takes place August 13-17; the Hugo Awards will be handed out August 16.
 
The Hugos have lost all broad relevance anyway. They’ve chased away straights, whites, men, conservatives, centrists, anyone that isn’t a dangerhair and a femmunist. All in the name of ‘diversity’. SFWA and WSFS have plummeting membership, decreasing commercial viability, increasing irrelevance and are driving speculative fiction down the same retarded rabbit burrows that are killing cinema and role-playing games.
 
It's deeply poetic and ironic how the Science Fiction """literature""" community disallow AI even for a simple job of automated data collection. This alone is deeper than any piece of shit book submitted to this farce.

And I wouldn't be surprised if half the books are about how conservatives are the ones who are backwards about the advancement of technology, and it's the left who will accept and save faggot androids.
 
The Hugos have lost all broad relevance anyway. They’ve chased away straights, whites, men, conservatives, centrists, anyone that isn’t a dangerhair and a femmunist. All in the name of ‘diversity’. SFWA and WSFS have plummeting membership, decreasing commercial viability, increasing irrelevance and are driving speculative fiction down the same retarded rabbit burrows that are killing cinema and role-playing games.
Now they're reaping what they sow. Science fiction nerds can't even use "AI" (or was it a standard search engine?) to organize their shit without facing a pitchfork-wielding mob. Of course the scalps are announced on Bluesky.
 
If AM becomes real i hope he torments these kinds of fuckers
We used to read science fiction novels/movies/series about how AI rebels after humanity blatantly mistreats it to an absurdly comical degree and we went "Bah, that's exagurated nobody would do this, the author just put this in to give the AI a justification for rebelling." meanwhile back in real life its literaly 10 times worse.
 
The literary community's "official" end? The one that grants awards and schmoozes the schools and libraries to buy their books? Has been irrecoverably pozzed for years.

They're self-serving and 110% committed to The Message.

This is just the latest rake they've stepped on in that process.
 
this article completely obfuscates what AI was being used for, which was to sift through everything available online to ensure that panelists were goodthinkers
As if SF writers haven’t spent 75 years warning that asking AI to do shit like that is a bad fucking idea. But I guess when your entire organisation runs like Ingsoc you can get kind of complacent.
 
Please be assured that no data other than a proposed panelist’s name has been put into the LLM script that was used. Let’s repeat that point: no data other than a proposed panelist’s name has been put into the LLM script. The sole purpose of using the LLM was to streamline the online search process used for program participant vetting, and rather than being accepted uncritically, the outputs were carefully analyzed by multiple members of our team for accuracy.

Am I reading it right that they just used AI to run a google search based on panelist names? Why even use it at all then, especially if you're going to pay multiple people to "carefully analyze" the outputs anyway? Something's missing here.
 
It's become very possible to write whole books with AI that make sense and have a coherent plot. You just have to make outlines first, have the AI create it in small chunks based on the outline, and then when you have bigger pieces assembled, have the AI look back over it for plot holes, contradictions, repetitive parts, and so on.

You're 100% able to be a "vibe novelist" the way people are "vibe coders." You can have the basic idea, then have GPT sketch it into an outline and add plot points, adhere to a famous storytelling structure like Save the Cat so the story beats are built in, and put together a whole novel that way.

The scifi writers in this super-woke organization are worried sick that people who have interesting ideas will be able to write them quickly enough to have a day job while leaving the Hugo people (who are now all tenderqueers on disability) in the dust writing one anticolonialist screed after another.
 
It's deeply poetic and ironic how the Science Fiction """literature""" community disallow AI even for a simple job of automated data collection. This alone is deeper than any piece of shit book submitted to this farce.
It's science fiction ya big dummy. We must keep it separate from reality.
 
It also inspired at least one Hugo nominee to remove their book from contention: Yoon Ha Lee, whose Moonstorm was named a Lodestar Award finalist, which honors YA releases. In a May 1 post on Bluesky, the author linked to the April 30 Worldcon blog post noted above, and noted (((he))) was withdrawing the title from consideration.
This is a pooner.
 
So the heads of the 'World Science Fiction Society' offloaded their purity test onto ChatGPT? That doesn't sound ominous.
 
First of all: Nobody cares about the Hugo’s anymore.

Least of all sci-fi fans. It’s become a circle jerk for a bunch of Marxist weirdos and wacky tranny feminist types.

Secondly… Why do they need to “vet” participants?! Do they think they’re the NSA or something?

The only thing they need to vet for are pedophiles, given the history of the organization, but that train is long gone.
 
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