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Thanks!Envelope icon at top right, start new conversation, put Laurel as recipient.
My rant overwrote my intended point and my feeble attempt to help. Surely something is happening as AI flags seem to be on the rise. It is only supposition, but I believe that Easter eggs are being added to a document by proofreading tools whether they admit it or not. Especially if the tool has been upgraded recently, these tools have come out of the closet and embrace being AI. Maybe you can turn that part off maybe it doesn't turn all the way off like one thinks. It used to be simpler, like Grammarly would just add a hidden html tag in the background for all suggestions, taken or not. Maybe it's more sinister now.Grammarly doesn't change anything. You can accept or reject changes its suggestions.
I use Grammarly and haven't had anything kicked back. I also copy and paste the text into the submission field, so it's pure text that is being submitted.Might be an interesting question to ask any and all that post this kind of rejection.
Did you use Grammerly or anything similar in any way during your writing of the rejected story?
If grammarly or any tool is hiding tags or anything like that in a document, just cut and paste the plain text, that should lose anything hidden in there that isn't actual changes to the text, if I'm understanding the issue correctly.My rant overwrote my intended point and my feeble attempt to help. Surely something is happening as AI flags seem to be on the rise. It is only supposition, but I believe that Easter eggs are being added to a document by proofreading tools whether they admit it or not. Especially if the tool has been upgraded recently, these tools have come out of the closet and embrace being AI. Maybe you can turn that part off maybe it doesn't turn all the way off like one thinks. It used to be simpler, like Grammarly would just add a hidden html tag in the background for all suggestions, taken or not. Maybe it's more sinister now.
It's currently a real problem for professors (probably more angst for students). I read about a prof who wrote a test paper, ran it through his filter and after getting a 0% AI score, ran it through Grammarly, where it then filtered to 99% AI.
So here's what the academics are suggesting to students and this technique could work here on Lit. Save a pre-proofreading-tool version of your story and if the edited final gets kicked back for AI, you can prove it is not.
CL
That would be a watermark. But if it is there, it should show up if you turn on show markup, so you can delete those markers. I doubt there is any kind of marker for that in Word, whether you're using Grammarly or not. What would be the purpose of such a tool, to highlight whether Grammarly or ProWriting Aid was used? I can't see them doing that. If a writer looks at it, see it, he can assume Grammarly or ProWriting Aid wants to out him for using AI. Wouldn't that be a bone of contention for a writer purchasing the software?My rant overwrote my intended point and my feeble attempt to help. Surely something is happening as AI flags seem to be on the rise. It is only supposition, but I believe that Easter eggs are being added to a document by proofreading tools whether they admit it or not. Especially if the tool has been upgraded recently, these tools have come out of the closet and embrace being AI. Maybe you can turn that part off maybe it doesn't turn all the way off like one thinks. It used to be simpler, like Grammarly would just add a hidden html tag in the background for all suggestions, taken or not. Maybe it's more sinister now.
It's currently a real problem for professors (probably more angst for students). I read about a prof who wrote a test paper, ran it through his filter and after getting a 0% AI score, ran it through Grammarly, where it then filtered to 99% AI.
So here's what the academics are suggesting to students and this technique could work here on Lit. Save a pre-proofreading-tool version of your story and if the edited final gets kicked back for AI, you can prove it is not.
CL
I'll look in some of my Word files to see if Grammarly left something hidden.That would be a watermark. But if it is there, it should show up if you turn on show markup, so you can delete those markers. I doubt there is any kind of marker for that in Word, whether you're using Grammarly or not. What would be the purpose of such a tool, to highlight whether Grammarly or ProWriting Aid was used? I can't see them doing that. If a writer looks at it, see it, he can assume Grammarly or ProWriting Aid wants to out him for using AI. Wouldn't that be a bone of contention for a writer purchasing the software?
I'll look in some of my Word files to see if Grammarly left something hidden.
I'm sorry to hear about that anonymous, experienced content provider who lost his job. It's a chilling warning to us all.ProWritingAid does not leave anything behind in documents. Besides, that's not how these worthless "AI detection" services work. They look at the text itself and compare it to content known to have been generated by ChatGPT and others.
OpenAI launched a detector back in January but have since taken it down for being highly inaccurate (it only guessed correctly 26% of the time). These over-hyped services are causing problems for writers of all kinds:
https://authory.com/blog/how-ai-detectors-are-destroying-livelihoods
I don't think so. As an IRL software engineer, I can tell you that Lit is probably just using an AI detector, and those are snake oil. I can throw tons of human-written content into all of the big ones and flag it.I wonder whether Grammarly is part of the problem. While it is a useful tool, it does risk standardising stories; I find I reject about a third of the suggestions because they either make things too formal or actually make things worse.
Don't add errors to avoid AI detection. That's ridiculous. Don't change the story at all, if you truly wrote it without AI assistance. Just resubmit with note to editor explaining you didn't use any AI assistance.I ran AI Busted against my story and found some parts that were marked as 100% AI generated. Those were the ones I added or rewrote late to flesh out the sex scenes.
I also asked it to score a text I generated with an AI and used several tools like DeepL against and it scored 100% human written.
I rewrote one of the parts from scratch. But only after I added mistakes like:
"That's my girl," he said with satisfied voice.
instead
"That's my girl," he said with a satisfied voice.
The score reduced the probability of being AI written. This change got it down from 40% AI to 2% AI. That's plain redicolous.
Don't add errors to avoid AI detection. That's ridiculous. Don't change the story at all, if you truly wrote it without AI assistance. Just resubmit with note to editor explaining you didn't use any AI assistance.
I can't guarantee results! I'm just philosophically opposed to letting an AI write your story in the sense of changing it around to satisfy an AI detector which is in fact an AI.I did that and mine got rejected again xD Resubmitted it a few days ago so I'm just waiting for a response now
Friend, either you're closing your eyes to a situation you do not wish to acknowledge
Or you are not aware of the caliber of disaster
Indicated by the presence of AI in our community
Well, ya got trouble my friend
Right here I say, trouble right in Literotica, why sure, I'm a writer
Certainly, mighty proud I say, I'm always mighty proud to say it
I consider that the hours I spend with a pen in my hand are golden
Well, if you submit that to Lit as poetry, ya got trouble:
AI busted: 42% Human Written, 58% Bot Written
Scribbler: 69% Probably generated by AI
AI-detector.net: "There is low risk that your text was written by AI."
www.writecream.com detector: Percentage: 9%
smodin.io: 0% Likelihood of Complete AI content
Me: 100% Meredith Willson homage
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Impossible! Both AI Busted and Scribbler's detection engines say it was largely written by AI. And we all know AI always tells the truth.It wasn't AI. It was creative plagiarism with a flair and used under parody and fair use exception.
I think the owners definitely DO appreciate a well written story. This seems to be a very recent issue (just the past few months, really). As others have suggested, I'd recommend resubmitted with a note that you wrote it yourself, and maybe mention the grammar checker thing. And also PM Laurel with the same info.If the owners of the site cannot appreciate that, then perhaps it is time to stop writing for this site and go to a place where well-written stories are appreciated.
I think the owners definitely DO appreciate a well written story. This seems to be a very recent issue (just the past few months, really). As others have suggested, I'd recommend resubmitted with a note that you wrote it yourself, and maybe mention the grammar checker thing. And also PM Laurel with the same info.
Most people who have resubmitted (it appears) have gotten approved, and I think the more people she hears from, the more likely it is that she'll tweak whatever process she has for evaluating AI