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Tuesday, the creators of the artificial intelligence chatbot ChatGPT announced that they had developed a second tool that would assist in distinguishing between text written by a human and text written by its own AI platform and technology that is comparable.
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Teachers and professors may be able to spot instances in which students are cheating or plagiarizing by using the new tool from OpenAI, based in San Francisco. Concerned that students will use the technology as a shortcut for essays and other writing assignments as well as exams, some of the largest school districts in the country have outlawed the technology.
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The tool is better at determining whether the text was written by an AI or a human when it is longer. Any text, from a college admissions essay to a literary analysis of Ralph Ellison's "Invisible Man," will be labeled as either "very unlikely," "uncertain if it is," or "likely" AI-generated by the tool when you type it in.
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Chakraborty stated, "It still has a number of limitations." Therefore, rather than serving as the primary tool for decision-making, it ought to be utilized in conjunction with other approaches to locating the text's source."
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