CleverGenericName
Just a Guy
- Joined
- Mar 24, 2023
- Posts
- 4
I don’t usually post on the forum (I never thought I’d be writing to you, but…). I had a story stuck in pending purgatory for months, and it was just officially rejected for suspected use of AI. I have found other people’s posts on this very frustrating issue helpful, so I thought I would share my experience and what I learned (or suspect) from it, to pay it forward.
Is there a “Fast Track” for successful authors?
I am not sure what the threshold is for successful authors, but I have just under 1,500 followers and over 750,000 story views on 20 stories, most of which are in the 4.8s, and I still had a story sent to pending Purgatory. So, if there is a “Fast Track,” it is only for the most rarified of authors.
Is there a “Pending” bug?
I would guess not. I would hypothesize that the pending bug is actually stories being flagged as AI-generated and moved to a much longer queue for human review. I think the reason that multiple resubmissions sometimes work to get out of pending is that AI-detectors are powered by LLMs (i.e., they are themselves a form of AI) and are notoriously fickle and inconsistent. So, each resubmission creates a new opportunity for the AI-filter to say, “No AI here, move along.”
I haven’t tested this theory myself, but I suspect that if you just deleted and resubmitted a story every time it was pending for more than 3 days, it would eventually get lucky with the AI filter and pass through (assuming the issue was a false-positive flag for AI use).
How did I finally get out of “pending” purgatory?
The second time I deleted the story after it had been pending for more than a month, I realized it was holiday-themed, so I resubmitted it as part of the winter holiday contest. That seemed to accelerate the rejection process.
Did I use AI to help write my story?
As someone whose neuro-spiciness includes dyslexia and a starter pack of other related challenges, I use Grammarly to catch grammatical and spelling issues that I am literally unable to perceive otherwise. This hasn't been an issue with 20 of my 21 submitted stories to date. My wife also reads through my stories before publication and usually catches additional issues, and I catch more when I use the “Read Aloud” function in Word.
Do you know what you did that tripped the Literotica AI Detector?
No. I ran my story through five different AI testing sites (including one paid site), and they all came back with a 95%+ chance of the story being entirely human-created. After the second stint in pending purgatory, I went back to an early draft of the story and completely rewrote it, and that number rose to a 99%+ chance that the story was entirely human-created.
I ran the story through a couple of general-purpose LLMs to see what they thought, and the consensus seemed to be that the most “AI”-like elements of my story were: lack of spelling mistakes, and grammatical consistency over a very long story (28K+ words). So maybe long story + clean edits = AI flagged by Literotica?
I’m honestly kind of stumped as to what else I can do to prove that my story is not AI-assisted. It is impossible to prove a negative (actually, that is not strictly true from a mathematical perspective; it’s more like “non-existence claims in open systems cannot be conclusively proven”), and without actually knowing which AI filter is being applied to my stories, it’s tough even to mount a defence.
I could try rewriting it again, but that is a depressing prospect, without any clear indication of what the perceived issue is in the first place. Or I could find another site to publish it on, I guess, but I feel a strong sense of loyalty to the folks who have taken the time to write and comment on my works on this site, and asked me to keep sharing my work here.
What are you going to do now?
I honestly don’t know. I mainly write for my own enjoyment and to manage my anxiety on days when my wife’s chronic illnesses are particularly bad, and this experience has been highly demotivating. At the same time, I’ve gotten a number of really kind and encouraging comments on my stories from people who seem to appreciate my efforts, which makes me want to try and push through my frustration.
I had two stories published for the Winter Holiday contest, both of which I spent significantly less time polishing and editing than the one that was stuck in purgatory. Maybe in the future I will just post stories when they are “good enough” and not worry so much about polishing and editing them. Or I might switch my focus to something entirely different, like writing a book or screenplay.
Anyway, I hope this is helpful for some of you facing a similar challenge.
Is there a “Fast Track” for successful authors?
I am not sure what the threshold is for successful authors, but I have just under 1,500 followers and over 750,000 story views on 20 stories, most of which are in the 4.8s, and I still had a story sent to pending Purgatory. So, if there is a “Fast Track,” it is only for the most rarified of authors.
Is there a “Pending” bug?
I would guess not. I would hypothesize that the pending bug is actually stories being flagged as AI-generated and moved to a much longer queue for human review. I think the reason that multiple resubmissions sometimes work to get out of pending is that AI-detectors are powered by LLMs (i.e., they are themselves a form of AI) and are notoriously fickle and inconsistent. So, each resubmission creates a new opportunity for the AI-filter to say, “No AI here, move along.”
I haven’t tested this theory myself, but I suspect that if you just deleted and resubmitted a story every time it was pending for more than 3 days, it would eventually get lucky with the AI filter and pass through (assuming the issue was a false-positive flag for AI use).
How did I finally get out of “pending” purgatory?
The second time I deleted the story after it had been pending for more than a month, I realized it was holiday-themed, so I resubmitted it as part of the winter holiday contest. That seemed to accelerate the rejection process.
Did I use AI to help write my story?
As someone whose neuro-spiciness includes dyslexia and a starter pack of other related challenges, I use Grammarly to catch grammatical and spelling issues that I am literally unable to perceive otherwise. This hasn't been an issue with 20 of my 21 submitted stories to date. My wife also reads through my stories before publication and usually catches additional issues, and I catch more when I use the “Read Aloud” function in Word.
Do you know what you did that tripped the Literotica AI Detector?
No. I ran my story through five different AI testing sites (including one paid site), and they all came back with a 95%+ chance of the story being entirely human-created. After the second stint in pending purgatory, I went back to an early draft of the story and completely rewrote it, and that number rose to a 99%+ chance that the story was entirely human-created.
I ran the story through a couple of general-purpose LLMs to see what they thought, and the consensus seemed to be that the most “AI”-like elements of my story were: lack of spelling mistakes, and grammatical consistency over a very long story (28K+ words). So maybe long story + clean edits = AI flagged by Literotica?
I’m honestly kind of stumped as to what else I can do to prove that my story is not AI-assisted. It is impossible to prove a negative (actually, that is not strictly true from a mathematical perspective; it’s more like “non-existence claims in open systems cannot be conclusively proven”), and without actually knowing which AI filter is being applied to my stories, it’s tough even to mount a defence.
I could try rewriting it again, but that is a depressing prospect, without any clear indication of what the perceived issue is in the first place. Or I could find another site to publish it on, I guess, but I feel a strong sense of loyalty to the folks who have taken the time to write and comment on my works on this site, and asked me to keep sharing my work here.
What are you going to do now?
I honestly don’t know. I mainly write for my own enjoyment and to manage my anxiety on days when my wife’s chronic illnesses are particularly bad, and this experience has been highly demotivating. At the same time, I’ve gotten a number of really kind and encouraging comments on my stories from people who seem to appreciate my efforts, which makes me want to try and push through my frustration.
I had two stories published for the Winter Holiday contest, both of which I spent significantly less time polishing and editing than the one that was stuck in purgatory. Maybe in the future I will just post stories when they are “good enough” and not worry so much about polishing and editing them. Or I might switch my focus to something entirely different, like writing a book or screenplay.
Anyway, I hope this is helpful for some of you facing a similar challenge.
