ChatGPT, Plagiarism Detector: Tools You Need to Catch AI-Made Content

Believe it or not, ChatGPT is popular amongst students and their works.

Artificial intelligence has both its ups and downs and the latest famous technology, the ChatGPT, is now a significant problem for educators and teachers who receive work from the program. The new system from OpenAI is now seeing growth in its use, especially in students that are tasked with their schoolwork but resort to the tech for their submissions.

This has become a problem now, as there is a hardship in detecting if the work was done by ChatGPT, and it is because it tries to deliver a natural-sounding voice, but these plagiarism detection tools may help.

ChatGPT, Plagiarism Detection Tools You Need

ChatGPT
Glenn Carstens-Peters on Unsplash
GLTR (Giant Language Model Test Room)

MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab and the Harvard Natural Language Processing Group have partnered together to deliver a tool that will help in detecting if the content used AI programs to create it. The GLTR or Giant Language model Test Room, however, has one flaw, as it is programmed to center on GPT-2 programs instead of the later one, known as ChatGPT.

It is still limited in its current version, but it is a promising technology to deliver all of its features available now. According to the team, it helps look into a device as it has access to the GPT-2 117M language from OpenAI.

GPT-2 Output Detector

This platform is made by the startup company themselves, OpenAI, and centers on the 2019-released artificial intelligence known as GPT-2. To date, it is still limited to detecting the GPT-2 output from users, but it does not mean that it is entirely effective.

The GPT-2 Output Detector was released shortly after the AI text generator came to life, and it provides as much as 95 percent in detecting machine-generated content. Despite not having absolute accuracy, it still yields a high detection rate for AI-made content.

GPT-Zero

GPT-Zero is an AI content detection tool from Edward Tien, a double major in computer science and journalism, who put his efforts into creating a system that could detect ChatGPT content as it is. The current version of the app is still in beta testing mode, and it has a false-positive rate that is less than two percent.

Its tagline is "Humans deserve to know the truth," and it is what the program aims to deliver to all those who would use it and look for signs regarding 'aIgiarism' or AI-plagiarism.

ChatGPT and its Effects on the Society

Some professors warned that using the AI tool will guarantee them a good grade, as they would still have to go under evaluation and process.

And while the OpenAI technology helps give students ready-made content from its AI creation, it does not exactly promise quality content. Yes, ChatGPT gives decent content to those who ask for it, but its creators claim that the technology should not be used for anything important yet, and this also includes one's work in school, jobs, and other uses.

ChatGPT is promising, but it should be used with moderation and boundaries, as creating schoolwork or other forms of content should still come naturally to people, instead of relying on an AI. Still, not all have keen eyes, and should they resort to plagiarism checkers or detectors, these three apps may help in catching AI-made content from submissions.

Isaiah Richard
TechTimes
ⓒ 2024 TECHTIMES.com All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.
Join the Discussion
Real Time Analytics