Skip to main content

AI Detector

I've been looking at AI Detectors that are now stable and easy to use. The first one to write about is from a company based in Montreal, and so, as you would expect from that bilingual city, it works on English and French texts. It's called Winston AI.



The AI detector tells you if written copy is generated by a human or an Artificial Intelligence text generator robot. It uses a graphic sliding scale. The software also detects plagiarism and presents a thorough list of any copied content it has found. As a user of Winston AI you just paste text into the quick scan option. You can upload bigger documents in the following formats: .docx, .pdf, .png and .jpg for the OCR (Optical Character Recognition) system to convert to electronic text from scanned documents or pictures. This also works on handwriting like Google Lens and the other handwritten text readers and convertors do. The Winston AI Detector works in projects, this lets you label or title pieces you are examining for plagiarism and keep a record of them. If you are marking the work of your students, for example, you can keep modules, cohorts, and individuals together. You might be examining CVs and letters from applicants and so this filing system into projects will help manage batches of checking. Winston AI will pick out any of the AI content creators like ChatGPT, Jasper.ai, RYTR, Copy.ai and this can help if you want to add content to your website or blogs. Google will find artificially made content too, so web page owners can clean-up their content before publishing.


Programme or program

I have spotted robot copy by reading, and had it confirmed. Clues include a sudden change to American spelling in a text from a British student, words like color, center, and a more subtle one where the text says program when the writer means theatre programme rather than a computer program. British or UK English has both words whilst US English spells them both in the same way. Pavement and sidewalk can reveal copied and AI texts if they used incorrectly. And just recently I spotted that tarmacked roads are called macadamised roads in non-UK English. And, of course, UK 'different from' and US 'different than'.

Enjoy exploring these new AI Detectors link to Winston here 







Please add us to the blogs you follow with your blog manager. Our url address to copy and paste is 
https://travelwritersonline.blogspot.com/  
then click to visit your blog manager below...  






Comments

Followers

Popular posts from this blog

Call for chapters

  Call for chapters   Sustainable Narratives and Technologies in Tourism   What will tourism look like in the 2030s? Tourism destination development will take sustainability as a given. Social media and emerging technologies will be integrated in the stories of co-created visitor experience. Are you working in these converging areas?     Following the success of our research monograph with Routledge and its teaching companion, we are looking for contributors for a new collection.   Click to view   Download free eBook   Chapters of up to 8000 words, including references. Each chapter to explore a tourism or hospitality development as a case study with details of underpinning theory. Provide example questions and answers for students, and PowerPoint® slides for lecturers to use your chapter in their modules.     Download and Submit in WORD Document Timeline for Chapter...

PhD in Contemporary Travel Writing

 PhD in Contemporary Travel Writing Syddansk Universitet Writing Travel in the Twenty-First Century: Mobility and Authenticity in the Planetary Emergency Travel is older than human civilization itself. Migration, trade, tourism and pilgrimage, all are forms of human movement that have existed for millennia. Yet travel is no longer what it used to be. Slow travel, flight shame, sustainable travel, eco- and anti-tourism, staycation and microadventures are but some of many recent terms testifying to a growing awareness that mobility has become inextricably intertwined with planetary concerns, regardless of whether it is the short distance of a commute to work, or that of long-distance globetrotting. With 2024 likely proving to be the hottest year on record and tourists evacuated by boat from uncontrollable forest fires on Rhodes in 2023, all the while tech billionaires promise us trips to Mars and hotels on the moon (while others perish trying to reach the Titanic), we are also told t...