Many eBooks, particularly academic works, classics, and self-help books, use dense or complex language that creates barriers for non-native speakers, young readers, or those with limited literacy. While tools exist to summarize or simplify short excerpts, there’s a lack of solutions that transform entire books into more accessible versions without losing their essence.
One approach could involve an AI tool that rewrites eBooks in simpler language. Instead of just shortening texts (like summarization tools), it would preserve the full content while adjusting vocabulary and sentence structure for clarity. For example:
Early testing could use open-source AI models (like GPT-3 or T5) and focus on public-domain books to avoid copyright issues.
Such a tool might help:
Monetization could include freemium features (e.g., pay for advanced customization) or partnerships with schools and eBook platforms.
Current tools like Hemingway Editor highlight complex sentences but don’t automate full-book simplification, while summarizers (e.g., SummarizeBot) shorten content rather than clarify it. A dedicated eBook simplifier could fill this gap by combining depth with adaptability—for instance, letting users fine-tune simplification by topic or dialect.
In summary, this idea centers on making written knowledge more accessible without dilution—a potential win for readers, publishers, and educators alike.
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