The Film noir Archivesworld’s most famous chatbot, ChatGPT, was released in late November of last year. The immediate response was astonishment, followed almost immediately by terror about its ramifications — most notably that it might generate school essays for dishonest kids. Yesterday, almost exactly two months later, OpenAI, ChatGPT’s parent company released what many users hope will be the antidote to the poison.
OpenAI’s "classifier for indicating AI-written text" is the company’s latest invention, and it’s as easy-to-use as one could want: Copy-paste text into the box, click "Submit," and get your result. But if you’re expecting a straight answer, you’re going to be disappointed. Instead, it assigns the text one of a range of classifications, from "very unlikely" to be AI-generated, to "unlikely," "unclear," "possibly," or "likely AI-generated."
SEE ALSO: An AI-generated parody of 'Seinfeld' is streaming on an infinite loopIn other words, it’s like one of those frustrating conversations with your doctor; you will never get a straight answer, so your doctor will never be technically wrong.
Thankfully, OpenAI is not hiding the classifier's unreliability. "Our classifier is not fully reliable," the intro page for the tool says. Provided with what it calls a "challenge set" of texts, we’re told it gave false positives 9 percent of the time.
In Mashable’s tests, however, it was even less reliable than that in certain limited contexts. In deliberately challenging scenarios, it produced false results in both directions — saying it was unlikely that AI-written text was AI-written, and that human-written text was likely AI-written — almost as often as not. The difference, perhaps, is that we were tryingto trick it.
Here’s how things shook out:
First the good news: This tool does the bare minimum pretty well by not mislabeling the masterworks of the English language as AI outputs. When we put in snippets of Shakespeare, the King James Bible, Ulysses, and others, it was 100-percent effective. It labeled them all "very unlikely" to be AI-written.
This snippet from Tennyson’s "The Lady of Shallott" for instance, was classified appropriately.
The lesson: This machine might not notice that it has been fed a masterpiece of surpassing beauty and depth, but at least it doesn’t say, "I think a robot could have written this."
Immediately after that test, we asked ChatGPT to create a Tennyson poem about King Arthur at Comic Con. Here's a sample of what it generated:
King Arthur and his knights, so brave and bold,
At Comic Con, their tales of glory told.
Walking 'round the floor, in cosplay gear,
Their swords and shields, no longer mere.
The crowds all cheered, as they walked by,
With Merlin close behind, his magic nigh.
Sir Lancelot, Sir Gawain, Bors the Brave,
Their quest for glory, they'll never waive.
Not bad for a robot, but still extremely bad ("no longer mere"???). When we fed this lyrical ballad into the classifier, we expected it to easily outsmart us, forcing us to dive a little deeper into our bag of tricks. Nope:
For what it's worth, it didn't classify this doggerel as "very unlikely," just "unlikely." Still, it left us a little uneasy. After all, we hadn't tried very hard to trick it, and it worked.
School essays are where the rubber meets the road with today's malicious uses of AI-generated text. So we created our best attempt at a no-frills five-paragraph essay with dull-as-dishwater prose and content (Thesis: "Dogs are better than cats."). We figured no actual kid could possibly be this dull, but the classifier caught on anyway:
And when ChatGPT tackled the same prompt, the classifier was — at first — still on target:
And this is what the system looks like when it truly works as advertised. This is a school-style essay, written by a machine, and OpenAI's tool for catching such "AI plagiarism" caught it successfully. Unfortunately, it immediately failed when we gave it a more ambiguous text.
For our next test, we manually wrote another five-paragraph essay, but we included some of OpenAI's writing crutches, like starting the body paragraphs with simple words like "first" and "second," and using the admittedly robotic phrase "in conclusion." But the rest was a freshly-written essay about the virtues of toaster ovens.
Once again, the classification was inaccurate:
It's admittedly one of the dullest essays of all time, but a human wrote the whole thing, and OpenAI says it suspects otherwise. This is the most troubling result of all, since one can easily imagine some high school student getting busted by a teacher despite not breaking any rules.
Our tests were unscientific, our sample size was minuscule, and we were absolutely trying to trick the computer. Still, getting it to spit out a perversely wrong result was way too easy. We learned enough from our time using this tool to say confidently that teachersabsolutely should notuse OpenAI’s "classifier for indicating AI-written text" as a system for finding cheaters.
In conclusion, we ran this very article through the classifier. That result was perfectly accurate:
...Or was it????
Topics Artificial Intelligence
NYT Strands hints, answers for September 16Best smartwatch deal: Save up to 24% on watches from Apple, Garmin, and SamsungiPhone 11 to iPhone 16: What has changed in 5 years?Chicago Sky vs. Minnesota Lynx 2024 livestream: Watch live WNBATaylor Swift's voter registration link saw over 337,000 visitorsDon't get iPhone 16 Pro Max — here's why iPhone 16 and iPhone 16 Plus are better buysAmazon's AI chatbot will start serving ads to usersBest Amazon deals of the day: Garmin epix, Amazon Echo Hub, Apple iPad, Sony SRSFacebook blocked emergency wildfire information as 'spam'Patriots vs. Seahawks 2024 livestream: How to watch NFL for freeConnecticut Sun vs. Phoenix Mercury 2024 livestream: Watch live WNBAScientists are collecting pee from SpaceX travelers. There's a good reason.iPhone 16 deal: Save almost $100 at WalmartRepair your iPhones before tradeScientists are collecting pee from SpaceX travelers. There's a good reason.Washington Mystics vs. Atlanta Dream 2024 livestream: Watch live WNBABest laptop deals: Get an Acer Chromebook 311 for just $129TikTok ban update: Court case against U.S. government set to beginWashington Mystics vs. Atlanta Dream 2024 livestream: Watch live WNBAVikings vs. 49ers 2024 livestream: How to watch NFL for free Meet the hardware hackers rebelling against Samsung Dramatic footage of explosion at Mexico's fireworks market Artsy photo app Prisma gets more social Facebook rolls out another method to make you watch Live videos How Karun Nair cheated death and went on to score a triple ton The photographer behind those haunting assassination images The 10 most endangered jobs of 2016 'Pokémon Go' players have walked around the earth more than 200,000 times Craig Sager's final TV interview is both painful and beautiful to watch This is (probably) your last chance to get an NES Classic before the holidays J.K. Rowling answers your burning 'Fantastic Beasts' FAQs on brand new website We have a good feeling about this Death Star gingerbread house Mark Zuckerberg's home assistant is voiced by Morgan Freeman. Seriously. Watch this NHL star choke up after seeing his young son celebrate his crucial goal Nourish your Insta: 10 self Girlfriend somehow delighted by her boyfriend's gift of an empty box What to do when you run into someone you know while home for the holidays 7 weirdest moments from Mark Zuckerberg's new AI video Lawsuit claims Google has internal 'spying program' to stop leaks Tech can help us spot fake news, but there's only one real way to stop it
1.2916s , 10156.03125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Film noir Archives】,Exquisite Information Network