I feel like writing could use a similar harness, where it attempts to minimally reword the authors sentences, perhaps just tweaking grammar, spelling, etc. In the coding example i think the human code would be near unchangeable, the LLM would pivot around it - but in the writing example i think the human writing would have to be more mutable. I imagine it would be a configurable setting.
I've not really seen a system which focuses on this human<->LLM look, but it feels interesting to me.
So the language harness makes sense to me, but corps are already cracking down on token use ( and such a harness would likely only add to the cost ). The other question is whether the people, who could benefit it would even recognize it as a problem though.
Running Alpine/Gentoo/Devuan isn't that expensive. (I'm assuming the cost is time/effort when I say this; let me know if there's another relevant metric)
I’m much more willing to read typos and bad writing than LLM writing. If I want to read the LLM rewritten version, I can run an LLM over the original writing myself. I have not yet found true that anyone is better at prompting than anyone else in a way that suggests that I wouldn’t get substantially the same results myself. Thus, I don’t think providing the version that has passed through the telephone game is accomplishing something that couldn’t be done by readers later. I have spent the vast majority of my life reading the original writing styles of people and didn’t have an issue then. I’m not convinced a problem I had was solved when we started post-processing writing with an LLM.