Pages:
Author

Topic: This gets me worried, I think the 'Brains' in the forum should look into it (Read 530 times)

legendary
Activity: 1974
Merit: 3049
Lol😆... It's funny how everybody on this forum is now an A.I suspect. Hahaha, because who knows if someday I might not be allegedly accused of being an A.I. But one thing we all need to understand is that this A.I tools we all use today weren't developed by aliens, but by humans like us, which means that there may be many persons out there that can effortlessly write some of the post we classified as 100% A.I generated contents here on this forum.

So on that note, I wish to beg whichever admin that might be placed in charge of executing judgement to whoever reported as an A.I poster to please endeavour to do thorough research. Thanks

Main problem I see is not in that some users can use AI for posting, but that we are facing up to a new low quality posts source which is not so easy to catch. Those ones who are suspected in AI posting usually leave low sense posts. It can be done by someone who understands not much and prone to verbiage, but can be AI written as well. So, as I see the situation, we are trying to find a tool to separate those ones who uses AI for making low quality content from people who can learn and improve their posts with time. Because otherwise forum will return to pre-merit situation, when it was just impossible to carry on a conversation because of one line posts written only to comply with the rules of bounty of 100-150 characters, but now it could be AI posts.

Forum is for talking to each other, for sharing experience and info, for asking questions and answering them. And everything preventing that like bad AI posts kills forums.
legendary
Activity: 2730
Merit: 7065
Really? But I stand to be corrected if I'm wrong. So how about bloggers who pay content writers on Fiverr to write a full blog post to be posted on their news blog. Will you consider that as plagiarism? Because they actually didn't write the content, but rather paid someone to do that for them?? (i.e following your definition of plagiarism)
The writer is not the primary concern here, the content is. It makes no difference if the owner plagiarizes content or whoever works for them does.

If I have a site and you write for me, I don't need to tell the world that I employed you to write the text. I can post it in my own name or have an editor do it. Copywriters even sign contracts stating the content belongs to the site. If the text you/me/the editor wrote is plagiarized, it becomes a problem. And again, the world is not going to care if I wrote it, I asked you to do it, or one of my neighbors did.   

But I think for the fact that I had no source and can't be found anywhere on the web online is a reason it ought to have been non plagiarized content, because I'm kind of curious to have someone break this down.
AI bots don't come up with their own content. They have a library of information they can refer to and pick what you asked them. A bot is a search engine writing content that has already been written somewhere before. It can't do things that have not already been done. Or in this case written. It can come up with variations, but based on some originals it has in its memory.

You don't have to post an actual link to an article you copied/paraphrased from. Naming the service is the next best thing. Source: Google, Chat GPT, Twitter, YouTube Live. No one can accuse of plagiarizing if you do that. Always post a link if you can, but since we are talking about bots here, it's not possible.   
legendary
Activity: 1974
Merit: 2124
Of course it's plagiarism. Plagiarism tools might not detect or classify it as such, but AI-generated content fulfills both conditions to be considered plagiarized.

1. You are using text that doesn't belong to you and which you didn't write. A bot wrote it.
2. You aren't posting a source from where or what you got the information from.

That's why it's plagiarism.   
This has already becoming a debatable topic and I am also of the opinion that if you are using AI generated tools like ChatGPT to copy content and directly pasting it as your post it's plagiarism because you have contributed nothing in it so how come someone can believe he it's right to do so?

The AI tools also gathers information from the different resources and present you a text for the keywords you have entered as per your search but they also come from different authors so in reality you are copying someone work so it's violation of the rules.Some members do this just to earn merits but in reality they will be caught because we will have more such plagiarism detecting AI tools and moreover we can indentify to some extent the difference between AI generated posts and human written one's so there's no fun in doing so.
legendary
Activity: 2730
Merit: 1560
Yes, I'm an asshole
Umm... taking a risk of sounding nosy... am I wrong if I wondered what the actual purpose of this thread is? OP seems have no interest to engage on the discussion occurred by raising this thread, as I can see him posting anywhere else but here. I initially thought he's concerned about having to watering down his english and cases of "false positive" on written-by-AI detection, but that's most likely not the case as he doesn't even bother to engage to any replies here.
legendary
Activity: 3556
Merit: 7011
Top Crypto Casino
One indicator said by nutildah is if the improvement happened in one night from a messy English to a flawless ones.
Yep.  And when it's the other way around (good English suddenly turning into poorly-written gibberish) it's also a bright red flag to members who've been here a while and are well aware that bitcointalk accounts can be quite valuable and that they change hands more often than they should.

Honestly, from my experience it's extremely rare for new members to be really proficient in English, and I think that's been true since I registered in 2015.  And we all know why: sig campaigns and bounties, which pay for posts in English, draw members who need to earn money in droves--and I'd venture to guess that most are from Asian or African countries where English isn't most people's first language. 

Note: I'm not knocking anyone for wanting to participate in campaigns or even for writing in a language that's not their native one.  The problem I've always had is that poor writing is often combined with a glaring lack of thought or effort.  You'd think that if you want to maximize your earnings long-term you'd do your best when posting, but Jesus....just look at some of the posts in Altcoin Discussion or other spam magnet sections.  So many of the lousy English writers aren't even trying.
legendary
Activity: 3010
Merit: 8114
there may be many persons out there that can effortlessly write some of the post we classified as 100% A.I generated contents here on this forum.

I doubt it. Can you find me one example of a human-written post that has returned "100% AI" or even "likely AI" in 4 or more of these detectors?

This is the one created by the makers of ChatGPT and is thus probably the best for identifying such text:

https://platform.openai.com/ai-text-classifier

Here are 6 other ones.

https://writer.com/ai-content-detector/ (max. 1500 chars)
https://gptzero.me/ (min. 250 chars)
https://contentatscale.ai/ai-content-detector/ (min. 25 words)
https://x.writefull.com/gpt-detector (50-2000 words)
https://hivemoderation.com/ai-generated-content-detection (max. 8192 chars)
https://paraphrasingtool.ai/ai-content-detector/ (max. 4900 chars)

Most of the critics of AI detectors use hyperbole to make their case, like the OP of this thread for example. Sure, the AI detectors are not perfect, and some are better than others.

Here's the thing: just be human and don't plagiarize or post spam, and you won't have anything to worry about. Doesn't seem like too much to ask.
hero member
Activity: 1176
Merit: 785
The first paragraph is changed a bit by the poster. Looks like ChatGPT said "While AI tools can be helpful..." because of the comma after "errors". Otherwise the sentence and comma placement doesn't make complete sense.

The second paragraph seems to be 100% AI-written.
Lol😆... It's funny how everybody on this forum is now an A.I suspect. Hahaha, because who knows if someday I might not be allegedly accused of being an A.I. But one thing we all need to understand is that this A.I tools we all use today weren't developed by aliens, but by humans like us, which means that there may be many persons out there that can effortlessly write some of the post we classified as 100% A.I generated contents here on this forum.

So on that note, I wish to beg whichever admin that might be placed in charge of executing judgement to whoever reported as an A.I poster to please endeavour to do thorough research. Thanks
hero member
Activity: 910
Merit: 680
LOL. I don't know if this was posted ironically or not.

Look at all of this person's recent posts -- they seem plagiarized or at least highly-"assisted". All their non-bounty posts are all ploys for merit and totally unnecessary.
I thought an user who use AI generated text will avoid to reply on Meta especially this thread when it discuss about the particular matter, but this user prove me I was wrong Cheesy

Maybe he created this thread Clarification on Plagiarism Rule and Policy in order to see if AI generated post is considered as plagiarism in this forum or not.

Although there are many users have a good English skill or they're a native speaker, but I don't see they're encouraging or correcting other users grammars, moreover they can post in their own local language board. Which is off topic if he say this community help other people to improve their language skills.
legendary
Activity: 3010
Merit: 8114
Members of the Bitcointalk forum should strive to improve their language skills. I believe AI tools can be helpful in identifying and correcting errors, they should not be relied upon as the sole means of improving one's language proficiency.

It is important for members to actively seek out opportunities to improve their language skills through reading, writing, and engaging in discussions with others. Additionally, forums like Bitcointalk can provide a supportive community where members can receive constructive feedback and guidance on how to improve their writing. Encouraging members to take an active role in improving their language skills can not only enhance the quality of discourse on the forum, but also benefit individuals in their personal and professional lives.

LOL. I don't know if this was posted ironically or not.

Writer.com: 68% human-generated content
gptzero.me: "Your text is likely to be written entirely by AI"
contentscale.ai: 40% human - "Likely to be AI generated!"
writefull.com: "44% likely this comes from GPT-3, GPT-4 or ChatGPT."
paraphrasingtool.ai: "It's likely that AI wrote this text"
hivemoderation: 99% - "The input is: likely to contain AI Generated Text"

This Hive Moderation one seems to have never been wrong thus far.

The first paragraph is changed a bit by the poster. Looks like ChatGPT said "While AI tools can be helpful..." because of the comma after "errors". Otherwise the sentence and comma placement doesn't make complete sense.

The second paragraph seems to be 100% AI-written.

Look at all of this person's recent posts -- they seem plagiarized or at least highly-"assisted". All their non-bounty posts are all ploys for merit and totally unnecessary.
jr. member
Activity: 190
Merit: 1
Members of the Bitcointalk forum should strive to improve their language skills. I believe AI tools can be helpful in identifying and correcting errors, they should not be relied upon as the sole means of improving one's language proficiency.

It is important for members to actively seek out opportunities to improve their language skills through reading, writing, and engaging in discussions with others. Additionally, forums like Bitcointalk can provide a supportive community where members can receive constructive feedback and guidance on how to improve their writing. Encouraging members to take an active role in improving their language skills can not only enhance the quality of discourse on the forum, but also benefit individuals in their personal and professional lives.
hero member
Activity: 1176
Merit: 785
I don't think using AI generator is plagiarism...
Of course it's plagiarism. Plagiarism tools might not detect or classify it as such, but AI-generated content fulfills both conditions to be considered plagiarized.

1. You are using text that doesn't belong to you and which you didn't write. A bot wrote it.
Really? But I stand to be corrected if I'm wrong. So how about bloggers who pay content writers on Fiverr to write a full blog post to be posted on their news blog. Will you consider that as plagiarism? Because they actually didn't write the content, but rather paid someone to do that for them?? (i.e following your definition of plagiarism)

Quote
2. You aren't posting a source from where or what you got the information from.

That's why it's plagiarism.  
But I think for the fact that I had no source and can't be found anywhere on the web online is a reason it ought to have been non plagiarized content, because I'm kind of curious to have someone break this down.

Because I think the difference between plagiarized content and non-plagiarized content is that while plagiarized content has an already existing online source, non-plagiarized content has non.

Or do we have any contrary difference about this???
legendary
Activity: 1554
Merit: 1139
I don't think using AI generator is plagiarism...
Of course it's plagiarism. Plagiarism tools might not detect or classify it as such, but AI-generated content fulfills both conditions to be considered plagiarized.

1. You are using text that doesn't belong to you and which you didn't write. A bot wrote it.
2. You aren't posting a source from where or what you got the information from.

That's why it's plagiarism.   
Just to add to that, AI generated posts is by all means a spam post in the regards that, your posting not because you want to but, because you are obligated to and source for assistance from some bot that might make posts that don't conform to the thread or perhaps it is a thread of its own but is of no interest to you that is making the post. The obligation just makes to either yourself or some attachment just makes you put it out there and that's not some good practice.


Haven't said that, the flaws in the system as alarmed by OP clears the air that these are not actual standards that is expected to work everytime but some speculative too to aid, in deciphering what could be from what ought to be. Not many users would be penalised out of this @OP.

Your conjugation and articulation @OP is cool and far from what is expected of an AI in the context of your subject which tells that, your use of English is good none the less.
hero member
Activity: 1316
Merit: 379
WOLFBET.COM - Exclusive VIP Rewards
expressing oneself doesn't really mean writing some bunch of words to convince the reader, there are few words which you could just post that carry heavy meaning at same times summarized all you wanted to say.
When they said of spamming, it doesn't mean writing a very short words that results to spamming, you may write a very long and lengthy words but doesn't carry meaning would still results to spamming.

I am well aware that there are several members here that has very deep choice of words or their vocabularies, and it is not fair if we consider and judge them as bots.

Usually applying those words without the reader comprehending what the writer is saying can like term to be spam in my own point of view, because we are meant to keep here clean with a plain English where it could be easily understand by the readers, and not just using all manner of words just for self expression.

I've long been calling for theymos to put a welcome message with some of the forum rules and links for further reading etc when people sign up and now I hope that spurs him on to do that or something similar.

This is good idea sir, maybe to reduce the stress and also help in keeping this forum clean from people that are too lazy to write  and creates their personal post, and contributes to the progress of this wonderful platform.
sr. member
Activity: 812
Merit: 436
There's this common error we often make whenever we are typing in other to make a post, which is typographical error, this is very common and we all need to always proofread any post we are making before sending them, another thing is that learning never ends, we can all improves ourselves in many ways, there are instructional learning materials we can get in shops and also read online to aid our English speaking ability and dictions, but we must always reme that to err is human.
legendary
Activity: 2730
Merit: 7065
actually I disagree I do James Joyce stream of conciseness  on purpose and I have done it for years.
I am not familiar with the concept, but I can figure it out based on this sentence of yours I quoted. You overdid it a bit, though. I don't remember seeing such posts from you. At least, not to that extent.
Nevertheless, you don't qualify as a shitposter, stream of consciousness or not.

I would argue any correction made via a google search or a spell check simply does not need to be listed as a source.
Of course not. Google suggests corrections based on its dictionary anyway.

So if I write all of the above and ask an AI to polish it up am I cheating?
It's a delicate matter. I would say both yes and no. First of all, a shitposter doesn't know about stream of consciousness or James Joyce. Your average Bitcointalk shitposter doesn't know much about bitcoin or crypto either. The fact that you know and can switch between the two styles as desired removes all doubts. Doubts that didn't even exist.

Not every use of AI is immediately plagiarism. I see no problem in having an AI, Google Translate, Grammarly, or something similar correct the mistakes YOU WROTE. It's a problem if you ask the AI to create something for you because you can't write it yourself and then you present that and take credit for it. 
global moderator
Activity: 4018
Merit: 2728
Join the world-leading crypto sportsbook NOW!
Nobody is going to ban you just for having great English. That's probably just one of the criteria they're suggesting you look out for after their style suddenly improves from going from broken English to flawless or near-perfect.

I really think theymos is going to have to both put a warning when new users sign up and also mass PM everyone warning them not to use AI posting and anyone doing so will be instantly banned like we do with plagiarism because it's going to get out of control. Using chatgpt to post is just as bad if not worse as plagiarism and it's probably harder to detect. I've long been calling for theymos to put a welcome message with some of the forum rules and links for further reading etc when people sign up and now I hope that spurs him on to do that or something similar.
legendary
Activity: 1568
Merit: 6660
bitcoincleanup.com / bitmixlist.org
I think the post quality of ChatGPT is decent and above normal because it's AI generated that polish the grammar of the info available pn the internet. I think the main issue here for ChatGPT post was the inability to have an organic discussion since this kind of post is suitable as a bot response and not with human emotion.

ChatGPT also has the capacity to be dumb:



I think OpenAI just trains ChatGPT to reject requests for it to write scripts that interact with any website and that don't have any APIs defined for it, and cites the reason of the rejection as "ToS violation". Which I think is lame. Why don't they just train it to write: "I don't know how to interface with this particular website"?
legendary
Activity: 1302
Merit: 1089
Goodnight, o_e_l_e_o 🌹

Whats absurd is assuming any negative action would be taken against you for this result. Let's look at the results for your post from 5 detectors (its not long enough to be used by 2 of the 7 I listed here):

Writer.com: 47% human
gptzero.me: "Your text is likely to be written entirely by a human"
contentscale.ai: 100% - Highly likely to be human
writefull.com: 77% AI
paraphrasingtool.ai: "It's likely that a human wrote this text"

It would therefore not be rational to conclude that your post was written by AI.

Due to this inconsistencies in the above results, theymos is finding it difficult to make official rules about AI writing in the forum. I also think that some of those use the grammatical syntax of articles to determine if it is humanly written or AI written. But they ought to use the level of connectivity to an originating topic. Where this would be a problem to detect is when the AI generated post is actually the original post.

Op, you don't need to be discouraged and it does not call for retogration. The only implication of it is that it will drag the attention of campaign managers to your post especially Royse777 who already has rules against AI.
hero member
Activity: 1302
Merit: 561
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
What matters in every written content is it's value not the grammatical syntax, rhymes, idioms etc. Those are for entertainment purposes to keep the reader, but if a content is valuable to the reader he doesn't care about the rhymes anymore, he focuses on the information he wants to get from the piece of writing. Most of the top writers in the past who made contents that changed the world and passed relevant information, check the contents now with the said grammarly, you'll see lots of errors; passive words, bad syntax, etc. Yet the contents are valuable due to the secrets and deep knowledge readers can grasp from reading them. Grammarly shouldn't be a tool for a good writer, he doesn't need it to make good articles, because grammarly makes mistakes too, it's a bot as well. So, in the forum if you are using grammarly it should be for typo purposes not to make your article look good or changing of your sentences, as the previous sentence you made yourself can be of good readability to the reader than the one grammarly suggests. What matters is the message you are about to convey to the forum, and I don't think chatGBT can be able to craft a valuable content which has not be posted anywhere on the internet, it has no brain and can't be compared to the brain of a new born baby.
sr. member
Activity: 854
Merit: 424
Playbet.io - Crypto Casino and Sportsbook
Simple.

You don't have to write your posts with perfect English in Bitcointalk. We don't have An English as a Second Language (ESL) teachers or professors here (or do we have ?).

What do you need to communicate with other forum members?
  • Write your posts succinctly enough to express your opinion shortly enough. Why short? Because if you write lengthy posts, less readers will feel comfortable to read it all. In addition, writing to lengthy posts, you can lose your main points in writing.
  • Try to learn to write as best as possible individually in grammar as it will help you express your opinion better.

That's it. You don't have to rely too much on Grammarly or ChatGPT to compose your posts and get troubles.  Cheesy
Pages:
Jump to: