OpenAI, creator of the popular chatbot ChatGPT, has released a software tool for artificial intelligence-generated text recognition, the company said in a blog post on Wednesday.
ChatGPT is a free program that generates text in response to a prompt, including articles, essays, jokes and even poetry, which has raised awareness of copyright and plagiarism since its launch in November. I have gained wide popularity by raising concerns.
AI Classifier, a language model trained on a dataset of pairs of human-written and AI-written text on the same topic, aims to distinguish between AI-written text. The company said it uses multiple providers to address issues such as automated disinformation campaigns and academic dishonesty.
In its public beta mode, OpenAI admits that the detection tool is too unreliable on text under 1,000 characters, and the AI-written text can be edited to classify it.
“We’re making this classification publicly available to get feedback on whether imperfect tools like this one are useful,” OpenAI said.
“We recognize that AI-generated text recognition has been an important point of debate among educators, and it is equally important to recognize the limitations and impact of AI-generated text classifiers in the classroom.”
Since ChatGPT debuted in November and gained widespread popularity among millions of users, some major US school districts, including New York City, have banned the AI chatbot over concerns that students could cheat or plagiarize the text generator. will use for
Others have created third-party detection tools, including GPTZeroX, to help teachers detect AI-generated text.
OpenAI said it is engaging with educators to discuss the capabilities and limitations of ChatGPT, and will continue to explore AI-generated text.



