SugarStorm
Sapphic Storysmith
- Joined
- Jan 13, 2025
- Posts
- 91
Some credentials first. I work in IT, I like puzzles, and I happen to work with automatization. LLMs are part of my day job, and honestly, I quite like them — and I enjoy breaking them.
I’m going to show you how sensitive Lit’s AI detector really is. So if your story’s in Pending Purgatory, read on.
I write slow-burn lesbian romance, 30-40k words a piece, and I've been blessed with fast turnaround times when publishing. In September, Hearts Like Ours Pt. 01 went from submission to publication in 48 hours.
On Oct 10 I submitted Pt. 02, using same style, format and cinematic prose I enjoy writing. Crickets. After fifteen days, I pulled it. No AI rejection email — which I’ve faced twice before — just silence. Each time I re-uploaded, the submission timer reset within 24h, and then it got “stuck”.
I tried everything:
My vocabulary isn’t the best, I have a tendency to repeat myself and my love for em-dashes is second to none, but no — my writing’s my own.
So I tested it myself. I ran my original story through ChatGPT simulating AI detectors GPTZero, Copyleaks and Turnitin. ChatGPT can only handle 6-8k words due to its tokenization, so most of the story wasn’t even analyzed. Out of 34k words, only two paragraphs (early ones) were flagged for being “too polished”.
I then split the story into chunks I knew it could handle. Two more paragraphs were flagged, both mid-story: “dialogue too polished”.
Here’s the thing though: I don’t think Lit runs a full review. It likely samples, just like ChatGPT does when you give it a full sized document. In theory, enterprise customers can get more tokens (more money >> access to different models >> more tokens to work with) or pay for usage (costly), but I doubt Lit does either of those things.
Anyhow, I purposefully only modified the first flagged section to see what would happen next:
Original:
Revised:
48 hours later, and with no submission timer being reset, Pt. 02 was published. So to summarize, I made four-five small changes on two paragraphs in a 105 page document and suddenly everything’s right as rain.
I will admit to having become a bit frustrated with the situation.
Here are my key takeaways, and best guesses:
I'm guessing — probably luck. Just like ChatGPT can give you a slightly different answer to the same prompt, AI detectors can wobble at the threshold. If your story sits near that edge, sometimes you just get lucky and slip past it.
I get the need for an AI detector; I just don’t think this is it.
The next time your story ends up in Pending Purgatory, ask yourself if it’s really because it’s “too polished,” or just unlucky enough to confuse a fickle algorithm. The fun, apparently, is in the surprise.
And for that reason, I’m out. For a while, at least.
I’m going to show you how sensitive Lit’s AI detector really is. So if your story’s in Pending Purgatory, read on.
I write slow-burn lesbian romance, 30-40k words a piece, and I've been blessed with fast turnaround times when publishing. In September, Hearts Like Ours Pt. 01 went from submission to publication in 48 hours.
On Oct 10 I submitted Pt. 02, using same style, format and cinematic prose I enjoy writing. Crickets. After fifteen days, I pulled it. No AI rejection email — which I’ve faced twice before — just silence. Each time I re-uploaded, the submission timer reset within 24h, and then it got “stuck”.
I tried everything:
- Delete/Resubmit
- Used only official Lit-approved HTML tags
- Uploaded docx instead of using the textbox
- Removed formatting
- Tried fewer tags
- No em-dashes
- Unticked the Series setting
My vocabulary isn’t the best, I have a tendency to repeat myself and my love for em-dashes is second to none, but no — my writing’s my own.
So I tested it myself. I ran my original story through ChatGPT simulating AI detectors GPTZero, Copyleaks and Turnitin. ChatGPT can only handle 6-8k words due to its tokenization, so most of the story wasn’t even analyzed. Out of 34k words, only two paragraphs (early ones) were flagged for being “too polished”.
I then split the story into chunks I knew it could handle. Two more paragraphs were flagged, both mid-story: “dialogue too polished”.
Here’s the thing though: I don’t think Lit runs a full review. It likely samples, just like ChatGPT does when you give it a full sized document. In theory, enterprise customers can get more tokens (more money >> access to different models >> more tokens to work with) or pay for usage (costly), but I doubt Lit does either of those things.
Anyhow, I purposefully only modified the first flagged section to see what would happen next:
Original:
Riley Vaughn existed in a kind of limbo.
In the days since the breakup she hadn't been fully present. Not at work, not in meetings, and certainly not in herself. Her calendar still ruled her time, her inbox still dictated her mornings, and Mr. Jensen Ackerman, CEO of the bank and frequent source of migraines, still demanded her sharpest thinking.
But Riley's mind was somewhere else. Somewhere floral.
Sarah.
The sweet 25 year old running <i>Roses & Reverie</i> had imprinted herself like pollen on Riley's lungs, every breath thick with her memory. And Riley, for all her control and precision, hadn't figured out how to properly exhale since.
Revised:
Riley Vaughn existed in a kind of limbo. In the days since the breakup she hadn't been fully present. Not at work, not in meetings, and certainly not in herself. Her calendar still ruled her time, the inbox still dictated her mornings, and Mr. Jensen Ackerman, CEO of the bank and frequent source of migraines, demanded the best of her.
But Riley's mind was somewhere else. Somewhere floral.
Sarah.
The sweet twenty five year old running <i>Roses & Reverie</i> had imprinted herself like pollen on Riley's lungs, every breath thick with her memory. And Riley, for all her control and precision, hadn't figured out how to properly breathe since.
48 hours later, and with no submission timer being reset, Pt. 02 was published. So to summarize, I made four-five small changes on two paragraphs in a 105 page document and suddenly everything’s right as rain.
I will admit to having become a bit frustrated with the situation.
Here are my key takeaways, and best guesses:
- The AI review seems to cover only the first 7k words or so of any story.
- Lit’s AI detector is unreliable (whoosh). I doubt it’s home-built; more likely an API link to a commercial detector set to I hate you. Given that Lit already uses third-party load balancing, monitoring, and forum hosting, this fits the pattern.
- If your timer resets, you’ve been flagged: for spelling, formatting, banned tags (don’t use “death”), requested edits, or possible AI content.
- If you’re not flagged, I don’t think anyone at Lit ever reviews your work. That’s supported by how quickly large stories sometimes get approved.
- This I think is the biggest change: the automatic AI rejection email we saw earlier this year has likely been moved into Literotica’s “review bucket", making it less visible and causing a major backlog or bottleneck. The “review bucket” has since become Pending Purgatory because Lit seem to review everything here manually.
I'm guessing — probably luck. Just like ChatGPT can give you a slightly different answer to the same prompt, AI detectors can wobble at the threshold. If your story sits near that edge, sometimes you just get lucky and slip past it.
I get the need for an AI detector; I just don’t think this is it.
The next time your story ends up in Pending Purgatory, ask yourself if it’s really because it’s “too polished,” or just unlucky enough to confuse a fickle algorithm. The fun, apparently, is in the surprise.
And for that reason, I’m out. For a while, at least.