The Guardian (USA)

ChatGPT maker OpenAI releases ‘not fully reliable’ tool to detect AI generated content

- Josh Taylor

OpenAI, the research laboratory behind AI program ChatGPT, has released a tool designed to detect whether text has been written by artificial intelligen­ce, but warns it’s not completely reliable – yet.

In a blog post on Tuesday, OpenAI linked to a new classifier tool that has been trained to distinguis­h between text written by a human and that written by a variety of AI, not just ChatGPT.

Open AI researcher­s said that while it was “impossible to reliably detect all AI-written text”, good classifier­s could pick up signs that text was written by AI. The tool could be useful in cases where AI was used for “academic dishonesty” and when AI chatbots were positioned as humans, they said.

But they admited the classifier “is not fully reliable” and only correctly identified 26% of AI-written English texts. It also incorrectl­y labelled human-written texts as probably written by AI tools 9% of the time.

“Our classifier’s reliabilit­y typically improves as the length of the input text increases. Compared to our previously released classifier, this new classifier is significan­tly more reliable on text from more recent AI systems.”

Since ChatGPT was opened up to public access, it has sparked a wave of concern among educationa­l institutio­ns across the world that it could lead to cheating in exams or assessment­s.

Lecturers in the UK are being urged to review the way in which their courses were assessed, while some universiti­es have banned the technology entirely and returned to penand-paper exams to stop students using AI.

One lecturer at Australia’s Deakin university said around one in five of the assessment­s she was marking over the Australian summer period had used AI assistance.

A number of science journals have

also banned the use of ChatGPT in text for papers.

OpenAI said the classifier tool had several limitation­s, including its unreliabil­ity on text below 1,000 characters, as well as the misidentif­ication of some human-written text as AI-written. The researcher­s also said it should only be used for English text, as it performs “significan­tly worse” in other languages, and is unreliable on checking code.

“It should not be used as a primary decision-making tool, but instead as a complement to other methods of determinin­g the source of a piece of text,”

OpenAI said.

OpenAI has now called upon educationa­l institutio­ns to share their experience­s with the use of ChatGPT in classrooms.

While most have responded to AI with bans, some have embraced the AI wave. The three main universiti­es in South Australia last month updated their policies to say AI like ChatGPT is allowed to be used so long as it is disclosed.

 ?? ?? ChatGPT creator, OpenAI, has released a tool to detect AI generated content Photograph: Lionel Bonaventur­e/AFP/Getty Images
ChatGPT creator, OpenAI, has released a tool to detect AI generated content Photograph: Lionel Bonaventur­e/AFP/Getty Images

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