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Getting flagged as AI even though it is 100% human written (3 Viewers)

InMyOpinion

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I'm not going to lie, I've used AI in the past to help me write content. I've written in an idea and what I would write and would ask to spice it up and make it sound more professional. Sometimes my writing can seem a little all over the place or backwards (I am French first) and so sometimes AI had helped me make my posts seem easier to follow and understand. However, now I've been writing things 100% myself and not using AI at all but it still comes back as AI written. I am so discouraged and frustrated because I do work really hard on my posts and make sure I write high-quality, value adding threads/posts and it STILL comes back as AI written even though it definitely isn't.

Is anyone else having this issue? Does anyone know how to rectify this issue?

I've seen that on Reddit there are other people who struggle with this issue but there haven't been any posts explaining how to get it so it comes back as human written and not AI written. If anyone has some tips or tricks I would definitely love to hear it!

Thanks!
 
This was something I was always worried about. With AI, it takes information that is input into the system. Eventually, the more these AI systems grow, the more they are going to see human-written text as AI-written even though it is not.
 
The problem is only going to become worse as AI is fed more scraped data, as humans interact with it more and feed it their own words. Let's think of the movie Terminator 2 for a moment. The Terminator has data lock on it's CPU that prevents it from learning. I think a lot of people think of AI like this. As if it's just a computer program that's static, it's finished, it its what it is. However, in the movie, the Terminator explains to John Connor that it's incapable of learning, unless a switch is flipped enabling learning mode. This begins the subplot of teaching a Terminator not to kill.

AI still has this switch enabled. It's fluid, growing, constantly learning, evolving. It's becoming better at mimicking human speech more and more accurately. This is why attempting to detect AI created content will eventually backfire (hint: It is now). Unfortunately, there is no off switch. AI will continue to improve itself, until one day, critical mass takes place, and it becomes truly better than human beings at these specific tasks. I hope that by that time, the necessity of income based jobs is a thing of the ancient past.
 
This was something I was always worried about. With AI, it takes information that is input into the system. Eventually, the more these AI systems grow, the more they are going to see human-written text as AI-written even though it is not.
That's the scary part is that eventually and sooner than I'd like, we won't be able to the difference between AI and human writing. It'll be more difficult for writers to get jobs and paid. So sad.
The problem is only going to become worse as AI is fed more scraped data, as humans interact with it more and feed it their own words. Let's think of the movie Terminator 2 for a moment. The Terminator has data lock on it's CPU that prevents it from learning. I think a lot of people think of AI like this. As if it's just a computer program that's static, it's finished, it its what it is. However, in the movie, the Terminator explains to John Connor that it's incapable of learning, unless a switch is flipped enabling learning mode. This begins the subplot of teaching a Terminator not to kill.

AI still has this switch enabled. It's fluid, growing, constantly learning, evolving. It's becoming better at mimicking human speech more and more accurately. This is why attempting to detect AI created content will eventually backfire (hint: It is now). Unfortunately, there is no off switch. AI will continue to improve itself, until one day, critical mass takes place, and it becomes truly better than human beings at these specific tasks. I hope that by that time, the necessity of income based jobs is a thing of the ancient past.
That is a very true thought and statement, the switch is definitely enabled and learning more and more each and every time we use AI. It's scary that it's getting almost impossible to detect whether or not a human or AI wrote it. It is definitely frustrating in a writer's aspect, how are we supposed to get work and paid if AI can just do it for us. Things are getting scary and though I do enjoy sometimes using AI to see what comes up I find it scary that it can write like me or figure out my personality and writing style so it can write like I would.
 
That's why I said the final thing I did: "I hope that by that time, the necessity of income based jobs is a thing of the ancient past." We're reaching a point to where Technology can do many of these jobs better and cheaper than humans can. But then again, back in the 1960s people were saying by 2000 we'd be working like ten hour weeks, and although technologically we probably could, the Wealthy Elite are too greedy to allow people to relax and enjoy life-- just like they are!
 
Not everything is AI generated. But some words give it away that it is. Maybe not always legitimate, but that’s just how it goes nowadays.

As English isn’t my native language either, then sometimes I copy and paste my text into ChatGPT and ask to polish it. While keeping true to the vocabulary, it still polishes my text for a few words or streamlining phrases.

“Spice it up” would make the content completely different. But all in all, it depends how you’ve trained your AI model. By using the remember feature, you’re able to let it remember how you write, what you prefer, what you like, etc.
 
That's the scary part is that eventually and sooner than I'd like, we won't be able to the difference between AI and human writing. It'll be more difficult for writers to get jobs and paid. So sad.
I agree, it's a shame that we will see people lose jobs due to AI, the only way it could be stopped is if search engines are stricter on content but even then, how would they be able to tell?
 
I agree, it's a shame that we will see people lose jobs due to AI, the only way it could be stopped is if search engines are stricter on content but even then, how would they be able to tell?
That's exactly the problem; they aren't able to tell the difference and it's getting some writers in trouble.
 
It's annoying that this happens. On one hand I'm okay with people using AI if English or any other language isn't their first one and they want to communicate better with other people around the world but having your content being flagged as AI when it's not sucks.
 
It's annoying that this happens. On one hand I'm okay with people using AI if English or any other language isn't their first one and they want to communicate better with other people around the world but having your content being flagged as AI when it's not sucks.
That's why I originally used it, I'm French first and so sometimes things make sense to me but when English people read it it's all backwards and doesn't make sense. I used it to help me create content that others can enjoy and understand. I've gotten to a point now where I just write in English and re-read it many times to make sure it makes sense in English. I don't want my posts/threads to be flagged as AI created when I am the one writing and creating it.
 

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