We tested it. You wouldn't want to accuse a student of academic misconduct based on these error rates.
— using the app to generate essays for class. The media was quick to bite on that narrative.
The numbers speak for themselves. GPTZero correctly identified the ChatGPT text in seven out of eight attempts and the human writing six out of eight times.impressive. But they also indicate that if a teacher or professor tried using the tool to bust students doing coursework with ChatGPT, they would end up falsely accusing nearly 20 percent of them of academic misconduct.
"I would have given this a good grade," Dan Gillmor, a journalism professor at Arizona State University, who asked ChatGPT to complete a common assignment he gives his students,In the face of those fears of the rapidly growing powers of AI, it's tempting to seize on the narrative that some brilliant coder has discovered an easy hack to sort out AI-generated text from that written by a human.
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