▲ | ycombiredd 5 days ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
I subjected some of my own writing to an "AI-detector" and was surprised to find what a high percentage of AI I must have in my DNA. Joking aside, I have found myself recently using phrases and styles of turning a phrase and stopped myself asking, "since when do you say that?" Since I've spent countless hours talking to LLMs, that's when. I even had a multi-hour conversation with ChatGPT about my idea for "perfectly flawed" lab-grown diamonds, several months ago and was excited to finally find a place to talk about what I learned, hence the comment you attribute to being from an LLM. I'm probably not an LLM, nor did I generate a response for this thread using an LLM, but you've just made me really self-conscious about how now humans, or at least myself, have to be wary that we don't start talking like the LLMs that are supposed to be talking like us. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | barrkel 5 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
If you want to hide the LLM tells better, you need more consistent combing. E.g. "hasn’t", "they’ve", "wouldn’t", "“natural” and “synthetic”" all use curly quotes, but other parts use straight quotes. Somebody tapping away at a keyboard will probably be consistent instead. Another big tell is the total overuse of antithesis. ChatGPT is cringy for this. "Not this, but that". I counted six instances of antithesis in your message. There were also three instances of hypophora, another beloved of essay generators. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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