For those wondering about a text that was written manually. I put my PhD thesis literature review into originality and got a 1% AI score. Make of that what you will!
Well done for your exploits of AI as an academic writing tool. I'm still waiting for that book you haven't written yet. i.e., "Completing your thesis in 6 months using AI tools". I bet once the first school summons the courage to adopt AI as an ordinary writing tool, your book will be handy for the ambitions. These tools are long overdue for research purposes and in aiding the physically challenged to contribute to the body of knowledge (imagine what text-to-speech could have done to the likes of Professor Stephen Hawking, of blessed memory). At the end of the day, it is original ideas that will triumph.
Andy, I also wanted to thank you for you hard work. You have inspired me on many mornings when I just did not want to write. I watch a video and I want to work.
I actually scanned my proposal paragraphs -which were written before GPT existed - and it detected 98% AI... so I wouldn't say it's very accurate unfortunately.
If paraphrased work is being detected as Ai then it means that AI detection tools are way too harsh now and they are punishing slightly original content as well
Not only slightly original but completely original - and that is the purpose of AI, viz. to create sufficient uncertainty in us and to arrogate all thought and power to AI. Paranoid? You bet!
I use AI for framework and direction/guidance in bullet points and then research each bullet point to write in my own language. This works. AI is your assistant to write not write on your behalf.
I am wondering why this guy is typing in the percentages. I pasted a text that was AI-generated in this "detecter" and it came back with human. I did this more than once. I would not trust this. But if you use A I as a guide and then research yourself, it would be good.
I write my own stuff and I still get flagged. Problem is that when you’re writing a lab report or critical review it’s strict scientific writing. I’m getting royally pissed off at this airport shit! I tested it and wrote a completely original text, then got ai to write me something. And guess what? My original text got 80.% ai what fucken BS
I would absolutely challenge any AI detection to my work. If detection tools are giving out "97% AI" for paraphrased work, then they're clearly not fit-for-purpose. I dont think any student or academic will be failed or rejected on the strength of AI detection tools alone. Plagiarism can be proved without any shadow of a doubt. It is easy to build a really strong, irrefutable case for plagiarism...the same cannot be said for AI generated content. There will always be room for doubt. Someone may just have a writing style that is very similar to a generative AI tool. There is no way to definitely prove that a piece of content has been generated by AI. Institutions would end up being sued if they start heavily penalizing people on the strength of detection tools.
People with Asperger’s Syndrome and Autism write very similar to AI. Since AI came out, I have been accused of being AI. I am not. Just Asperger’s Syndrome.
Especially in marketing, because AI has been loaded with a lot of marketing and blog writing styles. I have an about page article that was written for one of my websites that came back with parts of it. AI generated up yo 57.2%. So now I'm trying to figure out if it's just the writing style or if the writer used chat gpt. The detector I used is copyleaks, the best one I've found so far
I'm new to the AI thing but I write books. I think you are right, the AI tools bomb everything out and perhaps if you pay for them, maybe they will give you a pass. I don't know but even with rewriting the AI stuff it detects it as 100% AI. Something is fishy here I think.
So...2 things: 1) The percentage shows how confident the software is that the tested text was generated by AI; NOT the percentage of text that was generated by Ai. 2) I just ran a paragraph of my PhD thesis through it. I 100% made those lines of text because it is (literally) my original contribution to the field of IR. The results came back 50/50...First impression: This is a dangerous tool if professors think it is the end-all be all to detecting Ai...a lot of students might lose that battle just because the professor can't see my first point and into my case study (which proved to be very not accurate)
Exactly, these tools don't work. There is no way to detect 100% AI content, and we need to hold these software vendors to firm explanations of what they're tools. There is absolutely no way to detect these thing. LLMs work but using probability and other factors based on HUMAN written language. OpenAI is a closed system, even they couldn't create a tool that can tell 100% ai written content. These vendors are going to create a big issue for academia and professionals.
Chatgpt doesn’t write well enough for academic papers anyway. It’s great for providing a general structure that can be heavily edited and elaborated or for getting started just to build momentum.
It appears from what is written here that, using Grammarly to correct errors in my writing, have turned it into potentially AI written. So, still going to use Grammarly just only for spelling and typos, and not their sentence suggestions.
Ohhh yes it's true if you used Grammarly or such as app saying potentially AI....you own sentences and mistakes fixed by app and saying potentially.... it's true
I condense about half of the content in my own words, which often leads to favorable grading from my professor. This approach saves time on reading and researching. While I recognize that it's primarily the professor's responsibility, the industry heavily relies on AI for various tasks such as policy writing, coding, and drafting letters. Those who fail to adapt risk falling behind. As a side note, this message has been enhanced with AI.
After testing several AI detection tools, I found that Winston AI is the most accurate in identifying AI-generated content. It's consistently reliable and outperforms others in precision and trustworthiness.
I actually tested papers from 2015 in several AI detection bots and they were flagged as AI... I am in college so this has become very stressful for me to have my essays flagged when I know I wrote them without the help of AI.
AI detectors like this are not accurate, different company produce different scores. The results of my test, all of my Google translate results were detected as AI even though I wrote the original text from scratch. Even when I wrote several paragraphs of nonsensical fictional stories. I tried to translate my thesis to English using Google translate, it was detected >90% AI, even though my thesis was made from scratch and was a super niche topic. My thesis was written in 2010, when AI didn't even exist. 🤣
I have an 100 point essay I have to turn in and I'm scared I'll get failed for it (my teacher has already failed 2 students for it due to the ai checker “turnitin”) bc I worked really hard on it, but I've put it through ai checkers and all come back saying it's 40+% ai. ☹️
it's sad......what if someone is a good writer? Good with grammar? And so on......these AI systems are giving false positives to convince people to buy their "premium version" or more "tokens".......make it make sense....... there is a war on AI software programs that don't have people's best interests at heart.....its all a game
Ai detection doesn't work. Everytime you get a 100% score, question it. I copy-paste old articles from 2008 into ai detection and it was 100% AI. So yeah, AI detection is just not working. Try it yourself.
It simply doesn't work. Once there is no metadata embedded in any text, it is simply impossible to accurately detect. Period. Every service that claims it can, it is just simply a scam.
Andy, great video, as usual ! Many thanks. Please, note however, that most of these tools are not able to make a difference between text created by AI and text corrected by AI, and will give all of them a low human score. This particularly impacts non English native people that tend to use AI tools to correct their texts. (I know it by... personal experience !) Based on my own experience, UniCheck gives a very different score to text generated by AI and text corrected by AI, which could be because it is capable of making that difference.
@@Thischangeisnottelling I ran several (non scientific) tests over the last weeks using different texts across almost 10 tools and found that openAI's AI text classifier and zeroGPT are the less ambiguous (which does not mean the more precise...). On the other end of the spectrum, UniCheck and Winston went wrong almost every time they were submitted a text corrected by AI
The Originality AI seems overly sensitive, skewing towards false positives. I tested one of my original articles from the early 2000s, and it labeled it as 79% AI-generated. It appears to default to marking everything as AI-produced unless proven otherwise. It's a case of 'guilty until proven innocent'
There is absolutely no way to 100% determine if something is written by AI. I even passed an old paper through this and it still gave about 60% confidence that it has been written by an AI. And the last time I checked, I was very human. I'm a computer science grad so I've been trying to crack what patterns these detection tools look for determining AI generated content. The level of false positives given by these tools leads me to believe that there is no quantifiable method that can be used to detect AI generated content. Accuracy of AI detection is also substantially worse than the accuracy of information in AI generated content. Detection tools should never be used as a grounds for dismissal in academia, given how they are biased to give out a false positive. Being fairly new, there hasn't been any acceptable form of large scale testing for the detection tools. Any product that hasn't been tested with large datasets by multiple third parties, should not be implemented to determine futures of students.
100000% correct. We are now using algorithms to detect other algorithms. Should we create another algorithm to detect those algorithms detecting each other? This is nonsensical, how stupid are we getting at this point?
This reminds me of the case where the professor flunked the entire class for using ChatGPT to write the essays, even though they did not. Seems his tool was flagging everything as "AI detected" regardless of whether or not it actually was written by AI. 100% false positive! How do we know that's not what's happening to you? Perhaps any well-organized grammatically correct text is flagged as AI.
I think the AI detection scene is a bit of a mess. I put my own text that I wrote 2 years ago in chat GPT AI detector and it told me it's 100% AI written
And you're right. These things DO NOT work. There currently is not a single known AI model or system that can produce better _quality_ in a task than an equivalently trained human. Image recognitition, writing, writing detection, etc. - more generally, perception, creativity, and reasoning. You see things like "our proposed AI system outperforms human readers by 3%" or whatever in a medical imaging study, which is impressive, but you have to contextualize it within a highly currated dataset that in no way captures all of the variability observed in the world. These models up to now always fail on adversarial examples, while humans do not. And so my point is, if humans cannot reliably detect AI-generated content (except maybe Noam Chomsky), there is no model in the world (looks nervously at Google) that can reliably do so either. And the reason ChatGPT is so disruptive, is because humans cannot reliably classify the content it generates. This video was an ad.
and that's the best way to do it, instead of asking it to write as a whole :), but also fix reviese and edit it, ask ai to use alternate words according to your understanding. In that sense you make it your own from ai generated text.
Pls follow up this video with a broad range of original texts and original-AI-mixed texts and how those checkers perform there. Thx. Great work you are doing.
One big issue is that simply correcting 100% original work and running it through Grammarly can show up as AI. This has been happening while I have been writing comps for grad school. I am worried that schools will use Originality as some sort of definitive answer, when it seems to not link scientific writing that has perfect syntax and Grammarly corrected. I have multiple examples saved on my computer that show a before and after with Grammarly being the only difference, so that I can defend myself if I am accused. side note: I rean this for AI: it came back 94% likely human. Got this from grammerly: One big issue is that simply correcting 100% original work and running it through Grammarly can appear as AI. This has been happening while I have been writing comps for grad school. I am worried that schools will use Originality as some definitive answer when it seems not to link scientific writing that has perfect syntax and Grammarly corrected. I have multiple examples saved on my computer that show a before and after, with Grammarly being the only difference, so I can defend myself if I am accused. now its 53% likely AI. take away... Originality is a false positive machine. Just to pass its "detection" you have to write worse on purpose. They are going to lose a bunch of lawsuits if students get kicked out of programs as a result of their tool.
Just came on to say this as well. I took a sentence that I wrote. Originality identified it as original, but I used Notion AI to check it for errors. It didn’t make any changes and it flagged as 100% AI. This is a terrible tool.
@@seanaevelyn7518 it is a false positive machine. What’s funny.. you can take something as 100% AI, mess with it one word at a time, and you get one little change that will turn it to human. It makes no logical sense.
@@UniversityAIed no,. Simply using the checker that fixes syntax and gives suggestions on how to improve clarity. The tool that have been available for a long time
This is so true. I have tested my work and a few of my son's middle school essays. Original work 95% human, then with grammarly 100% AI. I have come to the conclusion that originality AI is to grammar sensitive to use for anything.
Undetectable is rubbish. They seem to think that by inserting lots of punctuation and grammar errors, they will be more human. One of its favorite tricks seems to be something like this: 'The field of "Compliance Management" plays a role, in guaranteeing that activities comply with laws, rules and industry norms.' Note that comma after 'role'. I found that it created this structure in almost every input that I gave it. Did you actually read the output? How could you recommend something like this?
Agree with other comments about the paraphrasing bit. Paraphrasing of done correctly is NOT plagiarism. And also should not be considered “ai”. So if you paraphrase ai, a book, a podcast, or whatever else. It IS considered legit and should not be considered the original.
In my experience so far, I check paragraphs that show 90 plus porcent of AI when I manually paraprhased it entirely. This is gonna bring trouble because often times will appear to be AI generated when it is not. We'll see.
I typed in "how are you" into an AI detector and it says 100% AI. Right there I knew these detectors were actually fucked up. Their outcomes are based on how they feel about a particular sentence or phrase. 😅
Yep! No wonder I burnt out 2 semesters ago! Seems my reports got flagged and they thought I was plagiarising but I have the same type of writing I’ve always had. It’s my thumb print, and now all of a sudden I am considered ai 🤖 make it make sense
Unfortunately, that’s going to be nightmare for students who is even writing by themselves without any using gpt but still detecting as ai ,academic will not understand that till 3 years will pass
Something I've been doing is - I will use OneNote to dictate what I want to say, and then ask ChatGPT to fix the grammar and punctuation errors from the dictation software. Then I can usually ask it to improve the item "while keeping my personal style of writing". This usually gets 0% detection on GPTZero. To be fair though, at that point basically all the content is already mine. That is my way of getting past my "blank page" writers block.
I am a 35 year old man. I am a 35 year old man. One of those statements was written by an AI, and the other written by a human. Good luck differentiating which one.
I'm dating myself here, but I remember when I was in the 7th grade, calculators were a complete no-no. Writing essays with AI reminds me of that-just my thought.
My take is like showing your steps in math solution, you can give meta data, which are the stages of paper to prove its veracity. It is something like what we called footnotes.
I think it's actually fine to use AI to produce academic work. AI doesn't generate original ideas, it just implements them. Think of chat-GPT as a lab assistant or something. I have used it to generate the code needed to run my regressions nevertheless. Since I don't really like the way AI writes academic work I don't use it that much in the paper, but since in my field all experiments are statistical I use it heavily as an intern 😂
for the last 40 years (at least) the academic world "relied" on enslaved research assistants to write articles that were signed by the dept director (and sometimes the research assistant was not even mentioned in the authors list), and this has never been a scandal... But now, all of a sudden, only because it is AI writing it, it is becoming a big problem. Where is the problem/scandal if you generate your data, you generate your analysis, you come to your own conclusions and after you provide your guidance to get chatGPT to contribute to or assist with the writing of the final paper...? I understand that we should define the boundaries of "contribute to" and "assist with" but for me, introducing AI in the flow of actions in research could be more an opportunity than a disaster. I agree with you --I don't see that having an AI copywriting support is an issue (as long as you, not the AI, went through the phases of the research)
Keep in mind it’s difficult to define what originality means, and that originality and creativity are emergent properties of intelligence. More powerful models will surely be capable of both, and I suspect that had you seen a glimpse into 2023 from the past you might have thought the results of LLMs were creative and original.
I'm a freelancer but I have to stop writing essays coz of these AI detection tools. I hope guys making these algorithms are aware that wrong predictions can really end careers or even cause bad grades and they are at fault. Do i have to write dumb to pass an AI check?
This is not true AT ALL. I put in my papers from my undergrad from 2014 in this Undetectable Ai and it told me that it was written by Ai 99% which is just rubbish since Ai was not around at that time.
Same thoughs actually, because those things might not work well because every single human is unique and they're style of writing too! And you can't just blame a person for using AI just because his text looks robotic 🥴😒
I have a question/ problem; the issue is, when you generate a text with chatgpt, then paraphrased by any tool, once you copy the paraphrased text and paste it into chatgpt again, it will detect the text. So far none of the websites/tool for paraphrasing works. have you tried this?
Originality is total garbage. I purchased a subscription there and the way it works it's just wrong. First, I put 100%AI content and it was found. Then, I put mixed content and it flagged it as 100%AI. Then, I put content from my master's thesis from 2017, 99% AI. Then I wrote a paragraph 69% AI. I edited the grammar and spelling mistakes with Quilbot, 100% AI. This shit doesn't work. It just flags almost anything as AI despite being written before even AI was a thing.
I put a text that I wrote in 1999-2000 and gave me 40% ish AI, then I submitted the same text to chaGPT for grammatical and syntax corrections ONLY (as I am not an English native) and resubmitted it to Originality and WinstonAI it gave me 99% AI. The only ones that gave me a more accurate classification of the text are openAI Text Classifier and Unicheck. None of the other was able to make a difference between text written by AI and text corrected by AI
As a GenZ who's working in IT and has a degree in comp sci and comp eng. this is like saying I used calculator to do my work. It's either gonna get embraced now or it will be when our generation comes along in the management level.
I agree with another comment that this video is most likely an ad. Andy is tempted considering his large audience since his experiment is biased. It does not include running an entirely original text thru the detectors. Most likely such text will also be marked as produced by AI. If institutions start using those detectors, most likely we will need to start making mistakes on purpose. The hope is that academia will embrace the inevitable technological changes, accept the idea of using technology as help and start adjusting assignments and the way students’ work is evaluated. As for dissertations, I hope that the originality of the scientific work is what is actually important. At least in STEM disciplines.
@@DrAndyStapleton it kinda screams like an AD especially since u didnt mention that you added referral links to the services that you say FOR SURE ARE THE ONLY THINGS THAT WOOOORK. You get paid each time someone signs up using your link. Seems a bit suspect.
This was the only real breakdown I have found. Thank you Andy for this honest and straightforward breakdown. I thought there was a cheat code to smash out blog posts, but alas, the hard work can never be bypassed it seems! haha
Thank you for this. Excellent demonstration and guidance, especially for students. It's the lower end AI scores that at least alert me as an educator to check carefully for AI/plagiarism. Upon further investigation--typically I find more, and it is provable as plagiarism without a detection tool. I'm finding that some detectors are clearly better than others.
If the product is correct and an accurate reflection of the author's views, the literature cited, and the results of the original research, then who cares if an ai, a person, or some combination thereof created the manuscript? If it is good enough to pass peer review, that's all that matters
The output is without grammar errors. Unreadable. When you use grammar corrections tools . It gets detected as ai generated. If you tried to edit the document yourself. It still gets flagged as ai content
YOU CAN PUT YOUR WORK BEHIND A PAY WALL -> thus you don't have to worry about Google. Your customers will appreciate your new content and no spelling errors.
Great video! I feel like while people are just discovering the advantages to use AI for academic work, there is a small gap to even take advantage it. The speed of technology & AI is just too fast.
Just gone through your comment, I want to suggest to use another tool @stealthwriter. I have been using it for multiple writing purposes so give it a try I'm sure you are going to like it.
I have very mixed experiences with these detectors. I tried to put my text into HiveModeration, ZeroGPT, GPTzero, Writefull, Copyleaks, AI DETECTOR, AI Text Classifier, and now OriginalityAI. I tried to put two versions of the same text into them. The first version is raw text in latex format (with citations and equations in Latex format) and the second version is text copied from pdf. Some of them show that there is some AI written text, some that it is original work, and some of them with one version showing it is original work, but the other version is not. OriginalityAI shows it is AI written text most of the time based on one word or phrase, which is general. Most of them label the text below the equation explaining each variable as AI-written or as plagiarism. The most crucial thing is that they don't understand how citations work. They show sentence is written by AI because they have maybe seen it during their training and ignored that there is a citation right after that sentence. Showing that the original text is written by AI when it is not can be very dangerous.
Thanks for the insightful video, but a quick question, please. Will my content count as AI content if I create content and use Chatgpt to paraphrase it for fluency? In other words, will the paraphrase of my content by Chatgpt count as AI content? Thanks in anticipation of your scholarly responses
I’m in academia and this ai detection is detecting up to 100% ai in non ai wrting. It’s making like hell. There are rules to writing scientific papers. Now we are using ai to dumb down our work so it doesn’t flag us as ai! It’s ruining the flow of our work! Absolute bs! So we now use ai to stop our normal writing looking too perfect??? It’s a disaster
If writing using AI tools is considered wrong or taboo then the same logic of thinking should also apply when using AI to detect AI-assisted writing. Based on this, using AI to detect AI is very wrong, in addition to creating many possibilities of wrong accusations and causing anxiety that should not exist.
So I did my university thesis about 10 years ago when any of this stuff hadn't surfaced yet and for fun run it through one of these AI detectives and got that my own hard work, blood, sweat and tears (I wrote that bloody thing for 8 months) is 80% likely written by AI. Like what the actual fffffffffff 😮 am I an android? 😂
But what about using AI that based on our own knowledge base? I use Mem and the AI draws upon the content-notes, thoughts, and quotes-that I write or paste in my Mem notebook. Mem Ai doesn’t crab content from outside my knowledge base. But it can write content based on the content I provide it.
i am currently writing my thesis of Bachelors and i am using AI to generate research questions, find the research gap and a little bit of main points for research. i plan on expanding on these points to get a final result. let's hope this bogus AI detection doesn't ruin my work
Hi Andy, thanks for the video. We would appreciate if you could make a video like this about text corrected or paraphrased by AI like chatGPT. I mean using ChatGPT like grammarly and Quilbot, but not to generate text.
Great video. I’m curious to know if it’s the copying and pasting the text from the AI generator that is flagging the content and if I just typed in what was generated would fix the issue. My other thought is I wonder if the data from using AI in general is collected and shared and that’s how other programs know hour similar to AI the content is. Curious to know your thoughts.
Could you put some human written text into that AI detection to see if the AI detection algorithm works, or it just throwing false positives for everything?
the key is to use original written content and use AI to rearrange things and looke for alternative phrasing and expressions and i assure you it works.
Great video..very informative 👍 I think we’re all getting used to these AI tools but I guess the issue is that they are here to stay and undoubtedly will be one sophisticated in the future. What really worries me are these AI dectectors giving 100% red flags to self-generated/original work!? How ridiculous 😮 You are absolutely right to be ethical throughout to avoid any reasonable doubt and or accusations of academic dishonesty. One should only use Chat GPT as an assistant and not the writer. Always best to start off writing your work in your way, doing a self evaluation, make manual changes, ask AI to suggest additional thoughts/angles and cite the evidence as you would with books/references, re-draft your work, put it through undetectable AI then through originality AI as a final check, then check it all a manually again the next day with a fresh pair of eyes, add your own style and personal touches, add quotes, diagrams, submit it and wait 😊 So unfortunate now that it’s all becoming a minefield and my worry is that students may decide to dumb down their academic standards to avoid AI detection!? There has to be a compromise here if AI is here to stay 😢
I need your advice on turnitin which is what should i do? Should i copy from chatgpt and put on quillbot to paraphrase and then put that paraphrase text on undetectable AI or should i just copy text on chatgpt and put on Undetectable AI directly?
When Turnitin checks plagiarism it gives you evidence from where the text is copied or taken. What evidence these AI detectors provide that a certain text is AI? Is the detection of AI Detection tools is admissible in court of law?
If even manual paraphrasing doesn't work, then there's a serious problem with these AI content detectors. This means that your own work done without the help of AI can be considered AI-generated. The example of those who did the test with theses or articles written even before the arrival of these AIs proves it.
I use some AI tools in my research. I've found it pretty useless at writing anything for me, but I do use it to provide a very short summary of papers (which is labelled as AI generated, and is thus never used anywhere but in my Bibliography notes on Obsidian - not actually for my dissertation, but I'm trying to build an archive of stuff I've read so I can find things again in post-doc/other non academic situations) and use an AI Obsidian plug-in which other notes each of my notes is 'similar to' (it's a basic similarity checker with a percentage output) which helps me connect ideas I have written on separate occasions about different texts. The fear, of course, is that if I write 'AI tools were used in the research portion of this dissertation, but not in a way where their output was used as part of the dissertation itself', I would still run the risk of people without a full overview of the system assuming it meant I didn't read the papers, or that I didn't write the notes. Of course, a paper trail of my notes exists, as well as my highlighting and multiple drafts, and none of my notes would ever trigger an AI detector (because none of my notes use AI), but would it be worth going through the hassle? My experience is that AI can't write a decent high school essay, let alone a focused dissertation, but there are a lot of people out there using ChatGPT as if it's smart and not just a language model.
On that note, I'm actually super pro-AI detection. The only way AI is going to get useful implementation in academia/elsewhere is if there is no fear of it plagiarising or cheating. There are clever ways to use a super powered computer that takes high level language input/output to make life easier - having it write your essay is the one I would be least interested in.
The most valuable piece of advice I can give for anyone looking into using AI at all in their workflow is this: Mark EVERY SINGLE thing that AI gives you as 'AI generated' or 'GPT'. You need to be 100% sure that it can never make its way into your drafts. Another tip is to refuse asking AI to do tasks which involve writing anything longform. Some tools (Research Rabbit and LitCharts for example) are AI powered and helpful, but not in the realm of ethical incursion.
It seems like many have had AI detected for their own writing. Has anyone managed to remain undetected for A.I for AI used writing with this tool(Originality A.I)?
I recently used an AI-powered tool to enhance my essay by correcting grammatical errors and making it sound more like a professional essay. Despite hearing rumors that relying on AI could lead to failure, I took the risk and was pleased with the results. However, my friend was caught using a similar tool and I am unsure of how he was caught.
I tried the undetectable tool many times to make content More Human and it did not work at all. It seems that AI checkers have caught up with the tool. I was hopeful, but it did not work. Any other suggestions?
Hi Andy today ! Thanks for that great information 👍 My problem is with chatgpt plugins and their templates, write an blog post, set the tone, style etc,etc, no matter which prompts I use when I check it in free quillbot AI detector or scribbr it always shows= 100% AI, so it makes me so confusing. Something is wrong but I not find out the culprit. Maybe is it the "robotic" structure chatgpt gives me; the structure with multiple outline, chapters, subchapters and all that? Nobody does writing like this one exception; long form pillar content ,yep there you need this but not with an article or blog post. I Hope you have an idea Andy what is wrong here with me or my prompts?
Im writing manuscript to publish in journal, can you give me advise how to paraphrase from others article sentences without get cought by sophisticated ai detectors
Hi Andy! Thanks for the video. I came across a video of another guy who mentioned Undetectable ai with similar results. Also just today I watched a video about Phrasly ai. Maybe you can test it out?
English is not my fist langguage....if I use ChatGPT to translate my original writing (in my mother language)...would AI checker consider it as AI writing?
Andy, from what I understand, AI puts a thumbprint in the code beneath the actual words and word order. It is akin to the metadata of a photo or mathematical equation. If the AI detection can pick up this AI thumbprint, how the text is written will not matter. This is why some AI detectors can be fooled, and some can't. Some only look for wording, while a few look for code. I wonder if undetectable strips the thumbprint from the text? Love this video. The ethics of AI use in Academia are still evolving. I use AI as a TA, Research Assistant, and Copyeditor.
Dude , I am currently writting a paper, this helped me a lot. Thank you. I am wondering how does an app or software,or a website is able to differentiate between an AI and a human written document? ..
Originality gained soooo much input data during the past few months that it is now saturated... so anything is scanned as AI. I believe it's done. There are others tools to detect your texts. Try to use more than one, compare and adjust.
For those wondering about a text that was written manually. I put my PhD thesis literature review into originality and got a 1% AI score. Make of that what you will!
Well done for your exploits of AI as an academic writing tool. I'm still waiting for that book you haven't written yet. i.e., "Completing your thesis in 6 months using AI tools". I bet once the first school summons the courage to adopt AI as an ordinary writing tool, your book will be handy for the ambitions. These tools are long overdue for research purposes and in aiding the physically challenged to contribute to the body of knowledge (imagine what text-to-speech could have done to the likes of Professor Stephen Hawking, of blessed memory). At the end of the day, it is original ideas that will triumph.
Andy, I also wanted to thank you for you hard work. You have inspired me on many mornings when I just did not want to write. I watch a video and I want to work.
I actually scanned my proposal paragraphs -which were written before GPT existed - and it detected 98% AI... so I wouldn't say it's very accurate unfortunately.
Try and do it one or two paragraphs at a time. Originality has an issue with smaller bites.
But normally most people use Turnitin for plagiarism check. Now Turnitin can also detect AI. So can you make a video about Turnitin AI detection?
Amazing video, this works for most AI detectors with the exception of Winston AI, which is definitely the standard for AI content detection now.
But Undetectable AI can avoid AI detectors, right
Is Winston ai free?
Try Walter writes AI it crushes all of detectors. Walter is goated in uni
yes walter is the only one that still works even after turnitin update
Does it?
is it free? no be to talk
If paraphrased work is being detected as Ai then it means that AI detection tools are way too harsh now and they are punishing slightly original content as well
Not only slightly original but completely original - and that is the purpose of AI, viz. to create sufficient uncertainty in us and to arrogate all thought and power to AI. Paranoid? You bet!
I use AI for framework and direction/guidance in bullet points and then research each bullet point to write in my own language. This works. AI is your assistant to write not write on your behalf.
I am wondering why this guy is typing in the percentages. I pasted a text that was AI-generated in this "detecter" and it came back with human. I did this more than once. I would not trust this. But if you use A I as a guide and then research yourself, it would be good.
I write my own stuff and I still get flagged. Problem is that when you’re writing a lab report or critical review it’s strict scientific writing. I’m getting royally pissed off at this airport shit! I tested it and wrote a completely original text, then got ai to write me something. And guess what? My original text got 80.% ai what fucken BS
I would absolutely challenge any AI detection to my work. If detection tools are giving out "97% AI" for paraphrased work, then they're clearly not fit-for-purpose. I dont think any student or academic will be failed or rejected on the strength of AI detection tools alone. Plagiarism can be proved without any shadow of a doubt. It is easy to build a really strong, irrefutable case for plagiarism...the same cannot be said for AI generated content. There will always be room for doubt. Someone may just have a writing style that is very similar to a generative AI tool. There is no way to definitely prove that a piece of content has been generated by AI. Institutions would end up being sued if they start heavily penalizing people on the strength of detection tools.
People with Asperger’s Syndrome and Autism write very similar to AI.
Since AI came out, I have been accused of being AI. I am not. Just Asperger’s Syndrome.
I was just failed on a assignment for Ai Detection.
Agreed. AI is far from perfect. AI detection included.
Especially in marketing, because AI has been loaded with a lot of marketing and blog writing styles. I have an about page article that was written for one of my websites that came back with parts of it. AI generated up yo 57.2%. So now I'm trying to figure out if it's just the writing style or if the writer used chat gpt. The detector I used is copyleaks, the best one I've found so far
I'm new to the AI thing but I write books. I think you are right, the AI tools bomb everything out and perhaps if you pay for them, maybe they will give you a pass. I don't know but even with rewriting the AI stuff it detects it as 100% AI. Something is fishy here I think.
So...2 things: 1) The percentage shows how confident the software is that the tested text was generated by AI; NOT the percentage of text that was generated by Ai.
2) I just ran a paragraph of my PhD thesis through it. I 100% made those lines of text because it is (literally) my original contribution to the field of IR. The results came back 50/50...First impression: This is a dangerous tool if professors think it is the end-all be all to detecting Ai...a lot of students might lose that battle just because the professor can't see my first point and into my case study (which proved to be very not accurate)
Exactly, these tools don't work. There is no way to detect 100% AI content, and we need to hold these software vendors to firm explanations of what they're tools. There is absolutely no way to detect these thing. LLMs work but using probability and other factors based on HUMAN written language. OpenAI is a closed system, even they couldn't create a tool that can tell 100% ai written content. These vendors are going to create a big issue for academia and professionals.
My thoughts exactly. There is no protection for actual original writings.
This is exactly my point. It will lead to people who don't understand this nuance accusing others of creating articles using AI.
Agree 100% NEVER USE THESE TOOLS.
I ran a section of a paper I did before the release of ChatGPT and it came back 50/50. I thought I was AI :)
Chatgpt doesn’t write well enough for academic papers anyway. It’s great for providing a general structure that can be heavily edited and elaborated or for getting started just to build momentum.
It appears from what is written here that, using Grammarly to correct errors in my writing, have turned it into potentially AI written. So, still going to use Grammarly just only for spelling and typos, and not their sentence suggestions.
Ohhh yes it's true if you used Grammarly or such as app saying potentially AI....you own sentences and mistakes fixed by app and saying potentially.... it's true
I condense about half of the content in my own words, which often leads to favorable grading from my professor. This approach saves time on reading and researching. While I recognize that it's primarily the professor's responsibility, the industry heavily relies on AI for various tasks such as policy writing, coding, and drafting letters. Those who fail to adapt risk falling behind. As a side note, this message has been enhanced with AI.
After testing several AI detection tools, I found that Winston AI is the most accurate in identifying AI-generated content. It's consistently reliable and outperforms others in precision and trustworthiness.
I actually tested papers from 2015 in several AI detection bots and they were flagged as AI... I am in college so this has become very stressful for me to have my essays flagged when I know I wrote them without the help of AI.
Same lol
AI detectors like this are not accurate, different company produce different scores.
The results of my test, all of my Google translate results were detected as AI even though I wrote the original text from scratch. Even when I wrote several paragraphs of nonsensical fictional stories.
I tried to translate my thesis to English using Google translate, it was detected >90% AI, even though my thesis was made from scratch and was a super niche topic. My thesis was written in 2010, when AI didn't even exist. 🤣
You are ai lol
I have an 100 point essay I have to turn in and I'm scared I'll get failed for it (my teacher has already failed 2 students for it due to the ai checker “turnitin”) bc I worked really hard on it, but I've put it through ai checkers and all come back saying it's 40+% ai. ☹️
@@Seek99_06
Even using Grammarly considered to be ai by ai check websites
Going to start my own ai detector that just flags everything as 100% ai.
Already exists - originality AI is broken. It’s to the point actual originality is detected as AI
it's sad......what if someone is a good writer? Good with grammar? And so on......these AI systems are giving false positives to convince people to buy their "premium version" or more "tokens".......make it make sense....... there is a war on AI software programs that don't have people's best interests at heart.....its all a game
The only reliable Ai detection is Turnitin
Lol 😅
There are already ones out there that detect 100% AI in their demo so you'll pay for their service. 🤣
Ai detection doesn't work. Everytime you get a 100% score, question it. I copy-paste old articles from 2008 into ai detection and it was 100% AI. So yeah, AI detection is just not working. Try it yourself.
It simply doesn't work. Once there is no metadata embedded in any text, it is simply impossible to accurately detect. Period. Every service that claims it can, it is just simply a scam.
Andy, great video, as usual ! Many thanks.
Please, note however, that most of these tools are not able to make a difference between text created by AI and text corrected by AI, and will give all of them a low human score. This particularly impacts non English native people that tend to use AI tools to correct their texts. (I know it by... personal experience !)
Based on my own experience, UniCheck gives a very different score to text generated by AI and text corrected by AI, which could be because it is capable of making that difference.
In this scenario, I think the best option is to ask for suggestions, not corrections. That's a better learning method anyway.
thats what happening to me
@@SamuelWebster Not every one knows native English speakers
which one's AI score was higher? the AI generated one or the one corrected by AI?
@@Thischangeisnottelling I ran several (non scientific) tests over the last weeks using different texts across almost 10 tools and found that openAI's AI text classifier and zeroGPT are the less ambiguous (which does not mean the more precise...). On the other end of the spectrum, UniCheck and Winston went wrong almost every time they were submitted a text corrected by AI
The Originality AI seems overly sensitive, skewing towards false positives. I tested one of my original articles from the early 2000s, and it labeled it as 79% AI-generated. It appears to default to marking everything as AI-produced unless proven otherwise. It's a case of 'guilty until proven innocent'
There is absolutely no way to 100% determine if something is written by AI.
I even passed an old paper through this and it still gave about 60% confidence that it has been written by an AI. And the last time I checked, I was very human.
I'm a computer science grad so I've been trying to crack what patterns these detection tools look for determining AI generated content. The level of false positives given by these tools leads me to believe that there is no quantifiable method that can be used to detect AI generated content. Accuracy of AI detection is also substantially worse than the accuracy of information in AI generated content.
Detection tools should never be used as a grounds for dismissal in academia, given how they are biased to give out a false positive.
Being fairly new, there hasn't been any acceptable form of large scale testing for the detection tools. Any product that hasn't been tested with large datasets by multiple third parties, should not be implemented to determine futures of students.
100000% correct. We are now using algorithms to detect other algorithms. Should we create another algorithm to detect those algorithms detecting each other? This is nonsensical, how stupid are we getting at this point?
and it just incentives students to dumb down there work its ridiculous. and pretend to make errors its dumb
💯
This reminds me of the case where the professor flunked the entire class for using ChatGPT to write the essays, even though they did not. Seems his tool was flagging everything as "AI detected" regardless of whether or not it actually was written by AI. 100% false positive!
How do we know that's not what's happening to you? Perhaps any well-organized grammatically correct text is flagged as AI.
I think the AI detection scene is a bit of a mess. I put my own text that I wrote 2 years ago in chat GPT AI detector and it told me it's 100% AI written
And you're right. These things DO NOT work. There currently is not a single known AI model or system that can produce better _quality_ in a task than an equivalently trained human. Image recognitition, writing, writing detection, etc. - more generally, perception, creativity, and reasoning. You see things like "our proposed AI system outperforms human readers by 3%" or whatever in a medical imaging study, which is impressive, but you have to contextualize it within a highly currated dataset that in no way captures all of the variability observed in the world. These models up to now always fail on adversarial examples, while humans do not. And so my point is, if humans cannot reliably detect AI-generated content (except maybe Noam Chomsky), there is no model in the world (looks nervously at Google) that can reliably do so either. And the reason ChatGPT is so disruptive, is because humans cannot reliably classify the content it generates. This video was an ad.
so true 😢
There is another way, just ask AI to give you some ideas, then write some sentences by yourself, be comprehensive, then ask AI to re write
and that's the best way to do it, instead of asking it to write as a whole :), but also fix reviese and edit it, ask ai to use alternate words according to your understanding. In that sense you make it your own from ai generated text.
Pls follow up this video with a broad range of original texts and original-AI-mixed texts and how those checkers perform there. Thx. Great work you are doing.
One big issue is that simply correcting 100% original work and running it through Grammarly can show up as AI. This has been happening while I have been writing comps for grad school. I am worried that schools will use Originality as some sort of definitive answer, when it seems to not link scientific writing that has perfect syntax and Grammarly corrected. I have multiple examples saved on my computer that show a before and after with Grammarly being the only difference, so that I can defend myself if I am accused.
side note: I rean this for AI: it came back 94% likely human.
Got this from grammerly:
One big issue is that simply correcting 100% original work and running it through Grammarly can appear as AI. This has been happening while I have been writing comps for grad school. I am worried that schools will use Originality as some definitive answer when it seems not to link scientific writing that has perfect syntax and Grammarly corrected. I have multiple examples saved on my computer that show a before and after, with Grammarly being the only difference, so I can defend myself if I am accused.
now its 53% likely AI.
take away... Originality is a false positive machine. Just to pass its "detection" you have to write worse on purpose. They are going to lose a bunch of lawsuits if students get kicked out of programs as a result of their tool.
Just came on to say this as well. I took a sentence that I wrote. Originality identified it as original, but I used Notion AI to check it for errors. It didn’t make any changes and it flagged as 100% AI. This is a terrible tool.
@@seanaevelyn7518 it is a false positive machine. What’s funny.. you can take something as 100% AI, mess with it one word at a time, and you get one little change that will turn it to human. It makes no logical sense.
As you may already know, Grammerly Go is just another Chat GPT API. So, under the hood of Grammerly Go is Chat GPT. Are you using Grammerly Go?
@@UniversityAIed no,. Simply using the checker that fixes syntax and gives suggestions on how to improve clarity. The tool that have been available for a long time
This is so true. I have tested my work and a few of my son's middle school essays. Original work 95% human, then with grammarly 100% AI. I have come to the conclusion that originality AI is to grammar sensitive to use for anything.
Undetectable is rubbish. They seem to think that by inserting lots of punctuation and grammar errors, they will be more human.
One of its favorite tricks seems to be something like this:
'The field of "Compliance Management" plays a role, in guaranteeing that activities comply with laws, rules and industry norms.'
Note that comma after 'role'.
I found that it created this structure in almost every input that I gave it.
Did you actually read the output? How could you recommend something like this?
Agree with other comments about the paraphrasing bit. Paraphrasing of done correctly is NOT plagiarism. And also should not be considered “ai”. So if you paraphrase ai, a book, a podcast, or whatever else. It IS considered legit and should not be considered the original.
In my experience so far, I check paragraphs that show 90 plus porcent of AI when I manually paraprhased it entirely. This is gonna bring trouble because often times will appear to be AI generated when it is not. We'll see.
I typed in "how are you" into an AI detector and it says 100% AI. Right there I knew these detectors were actually fucked up. Their outcomes are based on how they feel about a particular sentence or phrase. 😅
Or person. Lol.
My goodness 😂😂
Yep! No wonder I burnt out 2 semesters ago! Seems my reports got flagged and they thought I was plagiarising but I have the same type of writing I’ve always had. It’s my thumb print, and now all of a sudden I am considered ai 🤖 make it make sense
Now, what does Unicheck say, if you have actually written the text by yourself?
Can we be sure originality doesnt just score everything high for ai? What if you get it to check a bunch of self written work?
Unfortunately, that’s going to be nightmare for students who is even writing by themselves without any using gpt but still detecting as ai ,academic will not understand that till 3 years will pass
Something I've been doing is - I will use OneNote to dictate what I want to say, and then ask ChatGPT to fix the grammar and punctuation errors from the dictation software. Then I can usually ask it to improve the item "while keeping my personal style of writing". This usually gets 0% detection on GPTZero. To be fair though, at that point basically all the content is already mine. That is my way of getting past my "blank page" writers block.
gpt zero is useless with teh new version of chat gpt, your writing is still gonna get flagged as ai in turnitin
I am a 35 year old man.
I am a 35 year old man.
One of those statements was written by an AI, and the other written by a human.
Good luck differentiating which one.
LMAO
I'm dating myself here, but I remember when I was in the 7th grade, calculators were a complete no-no. Writing essays with AI reminds me of that-just my thought.
Ah, a fellow Gen Xer 😊. I always had to leave my Casio calculator watch on the teacher’s desk
My take is like showing your steps in math solution, you can give meta data, which are the stages of paper to prove its veracity. It is something like what we called footnotes.
I think it's actually fine to use AI to produce academic work. AI doesn't generate original ideas, it just implements them. Think of chat-GPT as a lab assistant or something.
I have used it to generate the code needed to run my regressions nevertheless. Since I don't really like the way AI writes academic work I don't use it that much in the paper, but since in my field all experiments are statistical I use it heavily as an intern 😂
for the last 40 years (at least) the academic world "relied" on enslaved research assistants to write articles that were signed by the dept director (and sometimes the research assistant was not even mentioned in the authors list), and this has never been a scandal... But now, all of a sudden, only because it is AI writing it, it is becoming a big problem. Where is the problem/scandal if you generate your data, you generate your analysis, you come to your own conclusions and after you provide your guidance to get chatGPT to contribute to or assist with the writing of the final paper...? I understand that we should define the boundaries of "contribute to" and "assist with" but for me, introducing AI in the flow of actions in research could be more an opportunity than a disaster.
I agree with you --I don't see that having an AI copywriting support is an issue (as long as you, not the AI, went through the phases of the research)
@@_salvax_exactly, these AI detection tools aren’t going to last long - especially if AI actually starts to mimic human writing
Keep in mind it’s difficult to define what originality means, and that originality and creativity are emergent properties of intelligence. More powerful models will surely be capable of both, and I suspect that had you seen a glimpse into 2023 from the past you might have thought the results of LLMs were creative and original.
@@BibleBreakoutwhich will very very soon as AI follows an exponential growth curve
I'm a freelancer but I have to stop writing essays coz of these AI detection tools. I hope guys making these algorithms are aware that wrong predictions can really end careers or even cause bad grades and they are at fault. Do i have to write dumb to pass an AI check?
This is not true AT ALL. I put in my papers from my undergrad from 2014 in this Undetectable Ai and it told me that it was written by Ai 99% which is just rubbish since Ai was not around at that time.
Same thoughs actually, because those things might not work well because every single human is unique and they're style of writing too! And you can't just blame a person for using AI just because his text looks robotic 🥴😒
I have a question/ problem; the issue is, when you generate a text with chatgpt, then paraphrased by any tool, once you copy the paraphrased text and paste it into chatgpt again, it will detect the text. So far none of the websites/tool for paraphrasing works. have you tried this?
Great video. Time for college to stop using essays and get into testing and quizzes.
Originality is total garbage. I purchased a subscription there and the way it works it's just wrong. First, I put 100%AI content and it was found. Then, I put mixed content and it flagged it as 100%AI. Then, I put content from my master's thesis from 2017, 99% AI. Then I wrote a paragraph 69% AI. I edited the grammar and spelling mistakes with Quilbot, 100% AI. This shit doesn't work. It just flags almost anything as AI despite being written before even AI was a thing.
I put a text that I wrote in 1999-2000 and gave me 40% ish AI, then I submitted the same text to chaGPT for grammatical and syntax corrections ONLY (as I am not an English native) and resubmitted it to Originality and WinstonAI it gave me 99% AI. The only ones that gave me a more accurate classification of the text are openAI Text Classifier and Unicheck. None of the other was able to make a difference between text written by AI and text corrected by AI
As a GenZ who's working in IT and has a degree in comp sci and comp eng. this is like saying I used calculator to do my work.
It's either gonna get embraced now or it will be when our generation comes along in the management level.
I agree with another comment that this video is most likely an ad. Andy is tempted considering his large audience since his experiment is biased. It does not include running an entirely original text thru the detectors. Most likely such text will also be marked as produced by AI. If institutions start using those detectors, most likely we will need to start making mistakes on purpose. The hope is that academia will embrace the inevitable technological changes, accept the idea of using technology as help and start adjusting assignments and the way students’ work is evaluated. As for dissertations, I hope that the originality of the scientific work is what is actually important. At least in STEM disciplines.
Not an ad. Just trying to be helpful, like in all my videos.
@@DrAndyStapleton it kinda screams like an AD especially since u didnt mention that you added referral links to the services that you say FOR SURE ARE THE ONLY THINGS THAT WOOOORK. You get paid each time someone signs up using your link. Seems a bit suspect.
This was the only real breakdown I have found. Thank you Andy for this honest and straightforward breakdown. I thought there was a cheat code to smash out blog posts, but alas, the hard work can never be bypassed it seems! haha
that is my conclusion too - back to writing it all myself
Thank you for this. Excellent demonstration and guidance, especially for students. It's the lower end AI scores that at least alert me as an educator to check carefully for AI/plagiarism. Upon further investigation--typically I find more, and it is provable as plagiarism without a detection tool. I'm finding that some detectors are clearly better than others.
If the product is correct and an accurate reflection of the author's views, the literature cited, and the results of the original research, then who cares if an ai, a person, or some combination thereof created the manuscript? If it is good enough to pass peer review, that's all that matters
Wrong. I placed a bible verse and it got flagged as 100% AI. Or is it correct?
😂😂😂
The output is without grammar errors. Unreadable. When you use grammar corrections tools . It gets detected as ai generated.
If you tried to edit the document yourself. It still gets flagged as ai content
The first honest video I have seen about AI humanize
Any evaluation has to look at both false positive and false negative rates. There is a whole field on mathematically evaluating detection methods.
I've always rewrote what ai generates into my own words and never had teachers suspect it
YOU CAN PUT YOUR WORK BEHIND A PAY WALL -> thus you don't have to worry about Google. Your customers will appreciate your new content and no spelling errors.
Great video!
I feel like while people are just discovering the advantages to use AI for academic work, there is a small gap to even take advantage it. The speed of technology & AI is just too fast.
Just gone through your comment, I want to suggest to use another tool @stealthwriter. I have been using it for multiple writing purposes so give it a try I'm sure you are going to like it.
I have very mixed experiences with these detectors. I tried to put my text into HiveModeration, ZeroGPT, GPTzero, Writefull, Copyleaks, AI DETECTOR, AI Text Classifier, and now OriginalityAI. I tried to put two versions of the same text into them. The first version is raw text in latex format (with citations and equations in Latex format) and the second version is text copied from pdf. Some of them show that there is some AI written text, some that it is original work, and some of them with one version showing it is original work, but the other version is not. OriginalityAI shows it is AI written text most of the time based on one word or phrase, which is general. Most of them label the text below the equation explaining each variable as AI-written or as plagiarism. The most crucial thing is that they don't understand how citations work. They show sentence is written by AI because they have maybe seen it during their training and ignored that there is a citation right after that sentence. Showing that the original text is written by AI when it is not can be very dangerous.
Thanks for the insightful video, but a quick question, please. Will my content count as AI content if I create content and use Chatgpt to paraphrase it for fluency? In other words, will the paraphrase of my content by Chatgpt count as AI content?
Thanks in anticipation of your scholarly responses
Glad I wrote my thesis before AI craziness. I would have been SO tempted 😂
Me too!
Run your thesis on any of them, it will still show AI detected. The whole thing is shit!
It's like anything, as long as your using it as a tool. Just like spell check and grammerly. I don't see any issue with it.
@@jacksonscarrabelotti Grammarly modifications use ai and are detected as such, that's the problem.
😂😂😂😂 lucky 🎉
Great explanation that ai should be used as a tool rather than a replacement.
I’m in academia and this ai detection is detecting up to 100% ai in non ai wrting. It’s making like hell. There are rules to writing scientific papers. Now we are using ai to dumb down our work so it doesn’t flag us as ai! It’s ruining the flow of our work! Absolute bs! So we now use ai to stop our normal writing looking too perfect??? It’s a disaster
I usually write the entire text and ask if there's improvements to the readability, grammar etc. Does this also get flagged?
Dude just redo the answer in your own words it will never get detected, revise revise revise
If writing using AI tools is considered wrong or taboo then the same logic of thinking should also apply when using AI to detect AI-assisted writing. Based on this, using AI to detect AI is very wrong, in addition to creating many possibilities of wrong accusations and causing anxiety that should not exist.
So I did my university thesis about 10 years ago when any of this stuff hadn't surfaced yet and for fun run it through one of these AI detectives and got that my own hard work, blood, sweat and tears (I wrote that bloody thing for 8 months) is 80% likely written by AI. Like what the actual fffffffffff 😮 am I an android? 😂
Consider this as a compliment 😂
It means you're too good at writing to be a human 😂
But what about using AI that based on our own knowledge base? I use Mem and the AI draws upon the content-notes, thoughts, and quotes-that I write or paste in my Mem notebook. Mem Ai doesn’t crab content from outside my knowledge base. But it can write content based on the content I provide it.
Very helpful in navigating the AI vs authentic, human created content.
i am currently writing my thesis of Bachelors and i am using AI to generate research questions, find the research gap and a little bit of main points for research. i plan on expanding on these points to get a final result. let's hope this bogus AI detection doesn't ruin my work
Good luck! 🙂
how did you do?
@@Academic_Bites Got A+ 12.0 Grade points.. Aced it
Hi Andy, thanks for the video. We would appreciate if you could make a video like this about text corrected or paraphrased by AI like chatGPT. I mean using ChatGPT like grammarly and Quilbot, but not to generate text.
It's on the video. Check it carefully.
I have to say that AI detection tools are so unreliable and punishing quality content as well
Great video. I’m curious to know if it’s the copying and pasting the text from the AI generator that is flagging the content and if I just typed in what was generated would fix the issue. My other thought is I wonder if the data from using AI in general is collected and shared and that’s how other programs know hour similar to AI the content is. Curious to know your thoughts.
Could you put some human written text into that AI detection to see if the AI detection algorithm works, or it just throwing false positives for everything?
the key is to use original written content and use AI to rearrange things and looke for alternative phrasing and expressions and i assure you it works.
Great video..very informative 👍 I think we’re all getting used to these AI tools but I guess the issue is that they are here to stay and undoubtedly will be one sophisticated in the future. What really worries me are these AI dectectors giving 100% red flags to self-generated/original work!? How ridiculous 😮 You are absolutely right to be ethical throughout to avoid any reasonable doubt and or accusations of academic dishonesty. One should only use Chat GPT as an assistant and not the writer. Always best to start off writing your work in your way, doing a self evaluation, make manual changes, ask AI to suggest additional thoughts/angles and cite the evidence as you would with books/references, re-draft your work, put it through undetectable AI then through originality AI as a final check, then check it all a manually again the next day with a fresh pair of eyes, add your own style and personal touches, add quotes, diagrams, submit it and wait 😊 So unfortunate now that it’s all becoming a minefield and my worry is that students may decide to dumb down their academic standards to avoid AI detection!? There has to be a compromise here if AI is here to stay 😢
I need your advice on turnitin which is what should i do? Should i copy from chatgpt and put on quillbot to paraphrase and then put that paraphrase text on undetectable AI or should i just copy text on chatgpt and put on Undetectable AI directly?
Trial and Error approach?
When Turnitin checks plagiarism it gives you evidence from where the text is copied or taken. What evidence these AI detectors provide that a certain text is AI? Is the detection of AI Detection tools is admissible in court of law?
If even manual paraphrasing doesn't work, then there's a serious problem with these AI content detectors. This means that your own work done without the help of AI can be considered AI-generated. The example of those who did the test with theses or articles written even before the arrival of these AIs proves it.
I use some AI tools in my research. I've found it pretty useless at writing anything for me, but I do use it to provide a very short summary of papers (which is labelled as AI generated, and is thus never used anywhere but in my Bibliography notes on Obsidian - not actually for my dissertation, but I'm trying to build an archive of stuff I've read so I can find things again in post-doc/other non academic situations) and use an AI Obsidian plug-in which other notes each of my notes is 'similar to' (it's a basic similarity checker with a percentage output) which helps me connect ideas I have written on separate occasions about different texts. The fear, of course, is that if I write 'AI tools were used in the research portion of this dissertation, but not in a way where their output was used as part of the dissertation itself', I would still run the risk of people without a full overview of the system assuming it meant I didn't read the papers, or that I didn't write the notes.
Of course, a paper trail of my notes exists, as well as my highlighting and multiple drafts, and none of my notes would ever trigger an AI detector (because none of my notes use AI), but would it be worth going through the hassle? My experience is that AI can't write a decent high school essay, let alone a focused dissertation, but there are a lot of people out there using ChatGPT as if it's smart and not just a language model.
On that note, I'm actually super pro-AI detection. The only way AI is going to get useful implementation in academia/elsewhere is if there is no fear of it plagiarising or cheating. There are clever ways to use a super powered computer that takes high level language input/output to make life easier - having it write your essay is the one I would be least interested in.
The most valuable piece of advice I can give for anyone looking into using AI at all in their workflow is this:
Mark EVERY SINGLE thing that AI gives you as 'AI generated' or 'GPT'. You need to be 100% sure that it can never make its way into your drafts.
Another tip is to refuse asking AI to do tasks which involve writing anything longform. Some tools (Research Rabbit and LitCharts for example) are AI powered and helpful, but not in the realm of ethical incursion.
Thanks so much! I used your affiliate link. So pleased with their service.
It seems like many have had AI detected for their own writing. Has anyone managed to remain undetected for A.I for AI used writing with this tool(Originality A.I)?
I recently used an AI-powered tool to enhance my essay by correcting grammatical errors and making it sound more like a professional essay. Despite hearing rumors that relying on AI could lead to failure, I took the risk and was pleased with the results. However, my friend was caught using a similar tool and I am unsure of how he was caught.
@@MeAF2711 Can you share the tool name with me
I used grammarly for my assignment to check grammar etc. I was shocked when a small part of my work came up as ai detection. How do i get around this.
The research was interesting and torough. I’m definitely subscribing.
I tried the undetectable tool many times to make content More Human and it did not work at all. It seems that AI checkers have caught up with the tool. I was hopeful, but it did not work. Any other suggestions?
originality generates 100% of AI detection even in already published papers even when chat gpt was not created
How would you do a literature review if even when you put your own words it identifies 97% AI?
I was reading that Undetectable AI can tweak text to.slip past most ai detection tool
Legend. Love your work man!
Hi Andy today ! Thanks for that great information 👍 My problem is with chatgpt plugins and their templates, write an blog post, set the tone, style etc,etc, no matter which prompts I use when I check it in free quillbot AI detector or scribbr it always shows= 100% AI, so it makes me so confusing. Something is wrong but I not find out the culprit. Maybe is it the "robotic" structure chatgpt gives me; the structure with multiple outline, chapters, subchapters and all that? Nobody does writing like this one exception; long form pillar content ,yep there you need this but not with an article or blog post. I Hope you have an idea Andy what is wrong here with me or my prompts?
Must be a new algo that the detection tool doesn't know yet. However, what happens if you put something like the declaration of independence?
Im writing manuscript to publish in journal, can you give me advise how to paraphrase from others article sentences without get cought by sophisticated ai detectors
Hi Andy! Thanks for the video. I came across a video of another guy who mentioned Undetectable ai with similar results. Also just today I watched a video about Phrasly ai. Maybe you can test it out?
Check out tomorrows video!
@@DrAndyStapleton YAY!!! 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
English is not my fist langguage....if I use ChatGPT to translate my original writing (in my mother language)...would AI checker consider it as AI writing?
What happens if I write my own text but use chatgpt to improve my text?
This is all very well, but the most important question is, where did you get that hoodie?
Andy, from what I understand, AI puts a thumbprint in the code beneath the actual words and word order. It is akin to the metadata of a photo or mathematical equation. If the AI detection can pick up this AI thumbprint, how the text is written will not matter. This is why some AI detectors can be fooled, and some can't. Some only look for wording, while a few look for code. I wonder if undetectable strips the thumbprint from the text? Love this video. The ethics of AI use in Academia are still evolving. I use AI as a TA, Research Assistant, and Copyeditor.
If that were the case then paraphrasing would be 100% effective at evading detection
That is nonsense.
I tried with a paper I wrote totally AI-free and the tool says “AI 97%”, so I cannot understand how it works!
It doesn’t work. That’s how it works.
Loving the Hoodie Andy 👍
Thank you 👍 Made it myself!
I was recently flagged at 99% AI written despite me writing my paper entirely myself.
Can you tray to check stealth writer tool also?
Looking at that output from undetectable, its really spotty. If that is what the output is, I cannot make a case for it.
Thanks for the video!
Dude , I am currently writting a paper, this helped me a lot. Thank you.
I am wondering how does an app or software,or a website is able to differentiate between an AI and a human written document? ..
Smoke and mirrors and clever product placements on a reputable TH-cam channel.
It will be just guessing, based on probability. Can go very wrong.
Is this a commercial? Do you have a stack in this app? You should reveal possible conflict of interests.
Does it work for the Spanish language?
?
@@TeckFlyer AI detectors do not work.
Really, You have done a great job.👍
Originality gained soooo much input data during the past few months that it is now saturated... so anything is scanned as AI. I believe it's done. There are others tools to detect your texts. Try to use more than one, compare and adjust.
thanks for this! i have more reason to still use Undetectable AI...