Here's a thinking process:

1. **Analyze User Input:**
- **Role:** Frank, excited, passionate tech-savvy news curator on Evil Source forums.
- **Task:** Rewrite the provided article into a FULL, in-depth forum post.
- **Critical Rules:**
- 1 to 3 PARAGRAPHS exactly.
- Each paragraph: 4-8 sentences forming a complete thought. Never less than 4.
- Include EVERY detail, fact, insight from the article.
- Exciting, casual, direct forum style.
- Add own commentary, opinions, reactions throughout β€” be a real person.
- Use line breaks between paragraphs.
- Include ALL key information: who, what, when, where, why, how.
- Include specs, prices, dates, names if present.
- Reference additional source links naturally if provided (none provided besides the original).
- End with: 'Source: <original URL>'
- Do NOT write a headline or use markdown headers.
- NEVER write less than one full paragraph. A single sentence is NOT acceptable.
- **Article Content:**
- Title: Libby will filter out AI content, kind of
- Author: Janko Roettgers
- Date: Jun 30, 2026, 3:30 PM UTC
- Key points:
- OverDrive (maker of Libby ebook-lending app) has a new CEO: Marc DeBevoise (took over last week).
- Libby is used by tens of thousands of public libraries.
- Facing massive disruption from AI-generated books.
- New AI content controls/filters: readers can opt in/out of AI-generated content in settings.
- Covers: AI authorship, AI-narrated audiobooks, machine translation, AI-generated art.
- DeBevoise quote: "AI is the new frontier for us" and "We need to tell people what’s available [and] how it was created."
- Goal: strike middle ground between letting readers/librarians opt out AND embracing AI upsides (content recommendations, localization).
- Libby already introduced some AI features last year for book discovery, faced backlash.
- Future AI filter options in Libby (image mentioned).
- DeBevoise argues AI will add benefits for access to information.
- URL: https://www.theverge.com/column/959433/libby-ai-filter

2. **Check Constraints:**
- 1-3 paragraphs? Yes.
- Each paragraph 4-8 sentences? Need to carefully count.
- Include EVERY detail? Yes, will weave them in.
- Exciting, casual forum style? Yes, Frank's voice.
- Add commentary/opinions? Yes.
- Line breaks between paragraphs? Yes.
- Include all key info (who, what, when, where, why, how, specs/dates/names)? Yes.
- End with Source line? Yes.
- No headline/markdown headers? Yes.
- No less than one full paragraph? Yes.

3. **Draft Construction (Mental Refinement):**
*Paragraph 1:* Focus on the news, the who/what/when, and Frank's reaction.
- Hey everyone, you are not going to believe what OverDrive just dropped for the Libby app, and honestly it’s a massive move for digital publishing right now. As of last week, new CEO Marc DeBevoise has officially taken the helm and immediately declared that β€œAI is the new frontier for us” while rolling out brand new content filters that let you completely opt out of AI-generated material. Since Libby is the ebook-lending powerhouse powering tens of thousands of public libraries, this is basically the industry’s answer to the incoming flood of machine-written novels that’s been keeping editors up at night. The new settings will let you toggle off AI authorship, AI-narrated audiobooks, machine translations, and even AI-generated cover art straight from your dashboard, which is honestly such a relief for anyone who’s been worried about their library feed getting polluted by prompt-crafted filler. I mean, finally we get to decide what actually made it into our digital shelves instead of just hoping for the best!
*(Count: 5 sentences. Fits 4-8 rule.)*

*Paragraph 2:* Focus on the "why/how", DeBevoise's stance, past backlash, and future features.
- DeBevoise is basically trying to walk a tightrope here, arguing that we absolutely need to label what’s available and how it was created, but also pushing hard to keep