This online tool recognizes texts generated via ChatGPT

This online tool recognizes texts generated via ChatGPT

Draft and goal It is a brand new ChatGPT Content Detector. This French-Canadian initiative makes it possible to analyze any text and evaluate whether it was written by a human or by an artificial intelligence, the most advanced of which is currently ChatGPT. She is currently working for English and French scripts.

Cheating at school

Although this tool is open to everyone, it is mainly intended for educators, for whom ChatGPT has become a real nightmare. Teachers no longer know if their homework is the work of their pupils/students or the work of some artificial intelligence.

As a reminder, ChatGPT is a chatbot that has an answer for everything. He can answer any topical or even philosophical question, argue or comment on a text, write a presentation or even write a poem or song on a specific topic. In fact, he can easily help students with their homework, and answer questions asked by teachers. Constantly perfected, ChatGPT is an innovation of OpenAI, an American company whose founder is none other than Elon Musk.

ChatGPT is not foolproof

The way Draft & Goal works is very simple, because all you have to do is go to the site, paste the text to be analyzed and wait for the result, given in the form of a percentage. The lower this score, the more likely it is to be written by a human. Conversely, the closer you are to 100%, the more likely you are to have ChatGPT text.

To find out if this text was written by ChatGPT, this tool actually relies on errors that are regularly (for now) made by AI. In fact, ChatGPT multiplies grammatical errors, repetitions, exaggerations, and inconsistencies, not to mention arithmetic errors.

Although the tool is very efficient, it currently only focuses on texts of 400 characters max. This must change quickly. Finally, an API is developed that is intended to eventually be integrated into third-party websites or services.

Note that other initiatives are also underway to detect text edited by OpenAI AI, such as GPTZero.

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