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Attention to those who make ChatGPT homework: The application that recognizes the texts written by artificial intelligence has been released

A new phase has been entered in the fight against the ChatGPT chatbot. Edward Tian, ​​a computer science student at Princeton University, has developed an application that detects whether text was written by a human or artificial intelligence.
 Attention to those who make ChatGPT homework: The application that recognizes the texts written by artificial intelligence has been released
READING NOW Attention to those who make ChatGPT homework: The application that recognizes the texts written by artificial intelligence has been released
A new phase has been entered in the fight against the ChatGPT chatbot. Edward Tian, ​​a computer science student at Princeton University, has developed an application that detects whether text was written by a human or artificial intelligence.

The US student says that he created the application called GPTZero during the New Year holidays. Thinking that people have the right to know the truth about the author of a certain text, Tian will help detect plagiarism originating from ChatGPT with the application he designed.

Collapsed due to high interest

GPTZero received so much attention that access to the application became difficult due to high traffic. The public version was tested by tens of thousands of people in one week. It is possible to access the tool in question from both gptzero.me and Streamlit.

GPTZero takes into account two indicators that are characteristic of the “human” text. The first of these is the complexity of the text, and the other is the disconnection of the sentences. The application, which evaluates the text according to these criteria, can tell whether the author is artificial intelligence or human. As its developer admits, GPTZero currently does not guarantee 100% accuracy, but it should be noted that work continues to improve the language model.

Concerns about academic plagiarism in particular have grown since OpenAI made ChatGPT public on November 30, 2022. Students started to use the chat robot, which gave very successful results, in payment. In fact, access to ChatGPT is banned in some schools in the USA.

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