ULPT REQUEST: What are some ways to get past an AI detector when using Chat GPT ?
Posted by my_throw_awayyy@reddit | UnethicalLifeProTips | View on Reddit | 253 comments
I'm a college student and I'm taking a class I don't need or care about. The problem is this class is a requirement for gradation so there is no other way to avoid taking the class. I want to use Chat GPT to cheat and get past any AI detector. As far as I know, my professor wouldn't be using the Turn It In website to check everyone's work.
Next_Confidence_3654@reddit
Cut and paste generated paper into a foreign language translator.
Cut and paste foreign language paper into English translator.
The difference in errors/translation are often enough to deter AI recognition programs.
Proofread and replace any vocabulary beyond your regular comprehension or things like,”as AI, I do not know the complexities of human opinions.”
cfpct@reddit
I have received quite a few papers from students who don't even read the AI generated content and just turn it in. It's just amazing how dumb some of my students are.
berrydanson@reddit
I cringe while reading some of my students responses because it so obvious they plugged it into GPT and just copy pasted it. But i dont reallt say shit since its just a class to fulfill a requirement lol
SmallPurplePeopleEat@reddit
I think it's more laziness, and not stupidity, that's the issue. Throw in some under-developed critical thinking skills and a vague understanding of what "consequences" actually means, and you get kids just turning in AI homework without any proofreading.
HGDAC_Sir_Sam_Vimes@reddit
As a teacher, I guarantee you it’s about 50-50. Some students are lazy some of them are just dumb.
StrengthLast7211@reddit
Some don't have time and too much on their plate for a irrelevant required class that is not at all helpful towards the degree. It is just a money grab from the school.
mikemojc@reddit
TBF, laziness in an academic endeavor is kinda stupid. Your goal SHOULD be to receive a lifelong education, not a one-and-done certificate of accomplishment.
CamelotBurns@reddit
Yeah, but colleges load you up with useless courses to extend your degree when they could use the time you where taking a film class to get even more into your chosen degree or be done in 2-2.5 years instead of 4.
DialsMavis@reddit
I just chose electives that fit in with my course of study instead of taking some film class. Not that there isn’t something worthwhile to be learned in a film class though
CamelotBurns@reddit
There wasn’t many electives that fit into my course of study offered by my university.
It was just intro to music, geography, arts, ect type classss.
Useful, but not what I was paying a lot of money to learn.
DialsMavis@reddit
Yes me too. It’s why I took intro to botany and many plant sci classes for my electives
min_mus@reddit
Regional accreditors require certain minimum course requirements, including general education, foundational, and core requirements. If you want your degree to come from a regionally-accredited school--and most universities in the USA are regionally accredited--you have to take those "useless" courses.
If you don't want to take those "useless" courses, you should attend a different type of school, e.g. a vocational-technical college, instead of a university.
Puceeffoc@reddit
Turn it in as quickly as possible so they can get back to "Ouch My Balls" an amazing TV show.
Party_Swimmer@reddit
Unfortunately, I am only allowed a single upvote; perhaps knowing I literally lol at this helps?
Puceeffoc@reddit
Aww thanks friend! Glad I could help!
androidmids@reddit
I prefer Butt. Butt 1, 2, 3, 4... Best sequels EVER
EasyAcresPaul@reddit
They might have been watching the government sanction rehabilitation demolition derby for all you know..
Hydro134@reddit
Monday night rehabilitation is my favorite weekly series!
SmallPurplePeopleEat@reddit
Go away, I'm 'batin!
MarkingOut44@reddit
No stupidity is there if they can't be bothered to edit any AI content for glaring examples like that.
Tommyblockhead20@reddit
I think lack of critical thinking is often considered stupidity.
The question is do they know the ai exposes it is ai written and they are too lazy to do anything about it, or are they too stupid (lacking critical thinking) to realize they should proof read anything written by someone else before turning it in. I’d imagine the latter.
Great_Hamster@reddit
That combo of things /is/ stupidity.
shadow_gaming09@reddit
Right now I'm getting pretty close to doing that, I can't get my ADHD meds rn so I'm really struggling to focus well also rushing to get my final stuff done. Do you have any suggestions for the quickest changes to start with so I don't get caught?
WestBrink@reddit
Lol, been almost 15 years now, so no chatGPT, but I was a grader in college. There was an early assignment in one class like "do all this reading, and then in your own words, define the following terms"
The number of assignments I graded with blue hyperlinks or [citation needed] printed out in them really makes you question what would by now be a crop of decently experienced engineers...
BirdFragrant6018@reddit
I wrote a VBA script to remove them in Word in my college days.
bobjohnxxoo@reddit
They probably don’t care enough about your class to give it a second thought
qwertyMu@reddit
It sounds to me like you’re the murderer and the detective in this case.
W1D0WM4K3R@reddit
And the best part is the ones I've seen that say "as an AI content generator" or something along the lines of lol
WestBrink@reddit
Lol, been almost 15 years now, so no chatGPT, but I was a grader in college. There was an early assignment in one class like "do all this reading, and then in your own words, define the following terms"
The number of assignments I graded with blue hyperlinks or [citation needed] printed out in them really makes you question what would by now be a crop of decently experienced engineers...
KNGKHVN@reddit
Ooof. Good one
secret_tiger101@reddit
"I can imagine how frustrating that must be. It's crucial for students to engage with the material and contribute their own understanding. Have you considered addressing this issue directly with your students or implementing strategies to encourage genuine comprehension?"
That was from ChatGPT…
BirdFragrant6018@reddit
This active listening bullshit is a dead giveaway of AI. People don’t talk like that. Only customer support chat representatives do and I’m not sure they are real people or AI.
HansenTakeASeat@reddit
This shit is so easy to spot as a teacher. You come across speaking in a way that no one in the entire world speaks. Also, if people are as lazy as OP, it's pretty fucking obvious when they start turning in high level critical analysis of shit when they couldn't formulate a coherent thought in class.
Next_Confidence_3654@reddit
All of what you say is true.
balacio@reddit
Very good strategy. I would also compile a pdf with essays you wrote and feed it to ChatGPT saying that this is your writing style. Then using the translated back to English version I would ask ChatGPT to rewrite it mimicking your vocabulary from your essays to add your personal flare. Then 3dit and proofread it and you’re good.
cutie_lilrookie@reddit
I don't think students who ask ChatGPT to create entire essays are neither smart to talk about doing this nor diligent enough to actually do it.
Forsaken_Ant_9373@reddit
First, I recommend using https://perplexity.ai to generate your text. Next, check whether your text is being detected as AI with https://undetectable.ai , then go to https://stealthwriter.ai and use that to humanize you text. Finally, make sure everything is correct and put it into Undetectable again. If it showing ai written at all, repeat the last two steps.
Source: I am a student
Mango_Pnch@reddit
tried this, worked out, 0% detection lmao. now waiting for the grade
GuiltySwimming9153@reddit
needed this! thank you so much for sharing. I checked out Undetectable AI and it really does wonders! my content is now well-written & undetectable. :)
KobeIsGOAT824_@reddit
nobody listen to this guy. he clearly is just advertising for the website that he's talking about. click on his account and you will see all of his reddit comments are him glazing undetectable.ai. I have a subscription myself and it isn't very good tbh.
Forsaken_Ant_9373@reddit
Damn, how much did you scroll?
StrawHatGorillaDeer@reddit
You are not a student. You're cheating yourself out of so much knowledge.
wiltstilt@reddit
what if it’s a random class??
StrawHatGorillaDeer@reddit
WTF is a random class? You build your own schedule in college. Every single class that you attend, you're paying hundreds of dollars to be in.
You do not need a college degree to get a job now-a-days, so why on earth would you shoot yourself in the foot by making yourself dumber and actively not trying to learn how to write?
Ardentpause@reddit
Many prerequisite classes are not relevant to a major. I had to take calculus in college for a psych degree. Also I needed a foreign language credit for some reason. Why?
StrawHatGorillaDeer@reddit
Talk to your counselor about why prerequisites are important. I'm not paid enough to children like you.
my_throw_awayyy@reddit (OP)
Clearly you haven't been to college before bro . They make you take a bunch of prerequisite classes before you are able to start taking classes that are actually relevant to the degree.
Numerous-Dragonfly52@reddit
Teachers pet backed off.
Ardentpause@reddit
Are you paid at all? I've been in my field for over a decade. I think I'd know what skills have been useful by now
my_throw_awayyy@reddit (OP)
Yep. I'm in the same position. I'm within the first 2 years of college and half the classes I'm taking are not relevant to my major. I understand exactly how you feel.
In my college, you have to take 6 writing classes, 2 math classes, 2 science classes, and 10 elective classes as prerequisite courses.
If i were to chamge the requirements, I would easily change that to 3 writing classes, 2 math classes, 2 science classes, and 4 elective classes.
I feel that colleges have so many prerequisite courses as a way to generate money. I personally think it's ridiculous that I have to take about 20 prerequisite courses before I take classes that are relevant to my degree.
wiltstilt@reddit
bro must of not been to college
my_throw_awayyy@reddit (OP)
The class I'm taking is a writing class. I live in the US and in my state, you have to complete 6 writing classes to get a degree. This writing class has absolutely nothing related to what my degree is but it is a requirement so I can't get around that.
So in summery, it's a useless class I have to take according to my college and the state.
TrumpsNeckSmegma@reddit
This
Fearless-Use-5587@reddit
The way to go is to paraphrase the text, either by using a tool, or do it manually if you have the time and patience.
Also keep in mind that even if you write manually, and then fix grammar automatically it might end up getting flagged as AI.
Appropriate-Car1043@reddit
Use https://ai-humanize.com It can bypass AI with humanized text and gives AI score for you to check detection as well. It is completely FREE.
Fragraham@reddit
Learn the fine art of pulling a paper out of your ass.
DabbinShaggy@reddit
This ancient technique is almost unheard of these days
HotMechanic157@reddit
Late reply, but so far the best tool that I have found is CleverSpinner. Most of content I have tried with it passes AI detectors such as Originality, Copyleaks, GTPzero, and the text fluency is also pretty good.
Breiting_131@reddit
Any available tools for that?
lookslikeyoureSOL@reddit
Have you heard of the concept of paraphrasing
manueins@reddit
Yes, agree with you! Rewrite it
GuiltySwimming9153@reddit
I’m using Undetectable AI. It’s what I have been using with ChatGPT to ensure it won’t get flagged as AI detected.
KobeIsGOAT824_@reddit
nobody listen to this guy. he clearly is just advertising for the website that he's talking about. click on his account and you will see all of his reddit comments are him glazing undetectable.ai. I have a subscription myself and it isn't very good tbh.
Whole_Helicopter7521@reddit
do the website help with humanizing your essays and making it not ai detectable?
Im_not_crying_u_ar@reddit
Yea I can’t fathom the people who just don’t treat ChatGPT as a research assistant and take the ideas not the exact words.
Roobenesk@reddit
Because ideas are exactly what ChatGPT is worst at. It will often produce "ideas" that are completely wrong.
Rasmosus@reddit
I have a student who just defended his bachelor's thesis. I know that he has severe dyslexia, so I complimented him on how thoroughly he had edited his thesis. He told me, that he had first written the entire thing, and then paragraph by paragraph, he had fed it to ChatGPT and asked it to suggest how to improve his spelling and grammar, and line by line he decided on whether the corrections made sense to him, and made changes as necessary. I like his approach. He didn't try to skip doing any of the hard work of researching litterature, analyzing well over 1000 pages of data and so on. He just used it as a tool to support him overcoming the constraints given by his disability.
Competitive-Bus1816@reddit
This is the way. It is a tool we need to learn how to use properly. This is a really great example of that.
Im_not_crying_u_ar@reddit
Right exactly a perfect example of how we should be using it. But like everything new, you have those who abuse it, those who fear it, and those who embrace it
SchwiftyGameOnPoint@reddit
I feel like when I was in school and Wikipedia was new, people said something very similar as people continuously copy and pasted directly from it. Along with similar things like "ChatGPT can be wrong" "Wikipedia can be wrong".
Im_not_crying_u_ar@reddit
Exactly. Also before internet, people copied verbatim from books. Nothing new. People are just stupid for not using as reference or understanding the topic well enough to rephrase
tanget_bundle@reddit
No. Can you tell me about this concept using different wording?
Aldyyyyy@reddit
No. Me about this concept using different wording can you tell?
WouldYouPleaseKindly@reddit
Yoda? That you?
420blzit69daddy@reddit
Yoda you that?
predtech@reddit
🤣
Rooster_Plane@reddit
Hahaha nice
Aggressive-Song-3264@reddit
Just remember to cite your sources as AI takes info from other places so...
CharlieTheo-14@reddit
100 percent...this...
Reacti0n7@reddit
nope, he slept through that class too. people too lazy to cheat now.
dogpro@reddit
He's lazy lol
HopeMaleficent1879@reddit
Just tried the new model from originality.ai — it's amazing! So good to see fresh updates.
rockstuffs@reddit
Don't cheat. Lack of integrity will bite you in the ass.
shadow_gaming09@reddit
really not the subreddit for this good of a suggestion
Appropriate-Car1043@reddit
Try https://ai-humanize.com/ some day, you will be amazed how good it works against most if not all AI detectors. And yes its free
ComanderCr@reddit
I use originality.ai\/ and I have not had any problems.
21h54@reddit
If you know well the phrasing of chatgpt and how to avoid it, you are basically undetectable. Any ai detector is bullshit and you can show it to you teacher by copy pasting Genesis or the declaration of independence.
GuiltySwimming9153@reddit
Undetectable is the key! been using this tool for a while now and it really bypassed ai detectors and makes my text well written! ☺️
KobeIsGOAT824_@reddit
nobody listen to this guy. he clearly is just advertising for the website that he's talking about. click on his account and you will see all of his reddit comments are him glazing undetectable.ai. I have a subscription myself and it isn't very good tbh.
thegovunah@reddit
Book of Genesis, upscale Hyundai, or Phil Collins?
21h54@reddit
All three, obviously.
McFuzzen@reddit
I also would like to know whether Phil Collins is AI.
b3n5p34km4n@reddit
Genesis =/= Phil Collins
Extension_Car6761@reddit
The best way to bypass any ai detectors is actually using a stealth writer from undetectable AI. It helped me a lot big time.
Extension_Car6761@reddit
A technique I frequently use to bypass AI detectors is using a paraphrasing tool from undetectable ai
Extension_Car6761@reddit
When I'm using chatgpt I always run it on undetectable AI's ai humanizer to bypass ai detection.
Extension_Car6761@reddit
Run it on undetectable ai humanizer! It work all the time.
Extension_Car6761@reddit
try using a humanizer tool like undectable.ai to bypass ai detection
SethSuperPogi23@reddit
The best way is to use undetectable.ai its the perfect tool for your content
SethSuperPogi23@reddit
Easy! use undetectable.ai click humanize there you have it.
DropsTheMic@reddit
1) create a "comprehensive detailed outline in bullet points" 2) To each bullet point is a paragraph 3) generate paragraphs and block it together until you are happy with it 4) take the completed draft paper and tell it to edit for "increased Perplexity and increase the likelihood that critical information will be put at the beginning of the sentence." 5) run it through an AI detector, should pass no problem
See username.
BlackflameLove_@reddit
The “see username “ part is based af
DropsTheMic@reddit
I'm over here handing out cheat codes for kids to pass essays. Super ego maniac.
JJ-Mallon@reddit
If you’re spending time using ai, then spending more time trying to fool a detector that what you produced isn’t ai, maybe it’s time to just use your own words.
For fuck sake, you’re in college. If the written word is too difficult, maybe you should reconsider your future there.
buffalobill22-@reddit
Sometimes you just have other more important classes to attend to. I wish I had ai when I was in school
JJ-Mallon@reddit
If you’re gonna pay large sums of money to cheat your way to a degree, then why not just skip past the schooling altogether and just buy a fancy piece of paper.
melo1212@reddit
Mate this is honestly this is such a dumb take. There's no way you went through an entire degree and actually think every single assignment and piece of content was useful. Not only that, I guarantee you forgot about 70% of what you learnt before 3rd year when you graduated. Using things like chatgpt to help you make outlines, plans and shortcuts to finish those shitty compulsory assignments quicker isn't a bad thing, especially for electives that have no relevenacy to your intended career in the future.
JJ-Mallon@reddit
Using AI to cheat on college assignments defeats the purpose of earning a degree. Sure, not every single assignment may be directly relevant to your future career, but the process of completing assignments and learning new information helps to develop critical thinking and problem-solving skills. Cheating shortcuts that process and undermines the value of a degree.
Even if you forget some of the specific content you learned in college, the skills and habits you develop while earning a degree are incredibly valuable. Learning how to research, analyze information, and communicate effectively are skills that will benefit you in any career.
Using AI to cheat on college assignments is not only dishonest, but it can also have serious consequences. Many colleges and universities have strict academic integrity policies, and getting caught cheating can result in expulsion or other severe penalties. Is it really worth risking your entire academic career just to save a few hours on a homework assignment?
Ardentpause@reddit
There is relevant info in a lot of classes, but there are also a lot of bullshit prerequisites. Colleges require those classes so they can generate extra revenue, but they aren't actually useful.
my_throw_awayyy@reddit (OP)
Thanks for commenting. What you said is dead on . I'm in my first 2 years of college and there are some classes that are actually useful but there are some classes that are utter bull crap. I think it's unnecessary to require students to complete 6 writing classes before they graduate. This doesn't mean writing is not an important skill.
I think they should only require 3 writing classes instead of 6. Let's be honest, most people that are in a writing class are in there because they need it as a graduation requirement. The vast majority of students in that class are not taking the writing class because they enjoy writing.
CptMuffinator@reddit
Must be nice to live somewhere that on top of paying large sums to get a post-secondary education you also aren't forced to take classes completely unrelated to what you're paying large sums of money for.
I'd have loved to not spend hours writing history essays when I was in a network administration course. Especially in my final year where I had a major capstone project to focus on during school and personal hours.
KnaveRupe@reddit
If you only want classes that are relevant to the skills you will need in your work, don't go to college. Go to a trade school. A college degree indicates that you have a college education, not that you have attained a specific list of job skills.
Ardentpause@reddit
You can't go to trade schools for everything
CptMuffinator@reddit
Outside of the three electives I had to take every class was relevant to my line of work. My college updates their courses every 5 years to ensure what they are teaching matches what employers are looking for, it's just a requirement that students take electives.
Trade schools are great for some professions but every trade school here for systems/network administration are all diploma mills.
JJ-Mallon@reddit
Then go to trade school instead of transgender dance theory at community college.
peachycaterpillar@reddit
really fighting invisible enemies here
CptMuffinator@reddit
What a wild assumption.
I'm okay not wasting my money on a diploma mill, I got a job immediately after graduating while the people I knew who 'saved money' going to trade school are still without a job in a relevant field.
JJ-Mallon@reddit
And I knew college graduates with degrees who ended up doing shit like driving cabs, dealing drugs, and working in otherwise completely unrelated fields of work to said education.
Research on your desired field, the pay scale, the market, and most importantly understanding what the career path actually entails are all important factors in the equation.
CptMuffinator@reddit
Sounds more like an issue with your colleges being trash then.
I researched my field. The choice was go to one of the diploma mill trade schools that don't work with any businesses to help their graduates get jobs and provides the exact same resources for finding jobs as the unemployment office or go to the college that works with dozens of different businesses every year to get feedback on what they'd like new graduates to know since they'll be exclusively offering positions to new graduates.
JJ-Mallon@reddit
And what is your degree in?
CptMuffinator@reddit
Transgender dance theory
JJ-Mallon@reddit
Perfect.
Maybe you could design tutus with dickholes.
Roobenesk@reddit
Why would a tutu need a dick hole? You're not even very good at transphobia.
JJ-Mallon@reddit
Some girls have penises. There’s nothing transphobic about that.
LargeTeethHere@reddit
Don’t fool yourself and think that college teaches you what real job experience won’t. I know a ton of people who cheated. C’s get degrees and no one really cares.
itwasbread@reddit
This is true for a lot of shit but you absolutely cannot make it as a blanket statement. If you cheat your whole way through undergrad you probably aren’t getting into law school and I sure as hell hope you are not getting into medical school.
LargeTeethHere@reddit
I apologize if I said it as a broad stroke. I’d like to make it clear that cheating your entire way through is not what I’m talking about. A little cheating here and there is fine IMO.
itwasbread@reddit
I mean ok yeah that’s fair, everyone does it to some degree here and there, that just wasn’t the impression I got from your comment or the context of the conversation.
My point is people shouldn’t hear “C’s get degrees” and assume that regardless of what they’re trying to do afterwards or what the specific course is they can just cheat or slack off their whole college career and then expect zero negative consequences down the road.
LargeTeethHere@reddit
In my experiences, people get very little consequences from cutting corners. Off topic,
itwasbread@reddit
Like I said my whole point is that it varies based on what you’re doing and what you cut corners on.
Oversell your excel skills on a resume? Unless you’re trying to be a CPA you’re probably fine.
Also consequences don’t have to be “getting your degree revoked for cheating” or some cartoonishly harsh thing like that, it includes things like having to learn a whole piece of software in 3 days because you said you’re an expert in it on a resume when in reality you’ve never opened the damn thing.
LargeTeethHere@reddit
I don’t think that’s a consequence. Personally, I’ll say I have a skill I don’t because within three months of being hired I learn it. I work in IT, I know this won’t work for everything.
itwasbread@reddit
Having to learn something on the job isn’t, but being assigned the tasks and deadline of someone who already is well-versed in the skill when you have no idea to do it is.
I don’t mean consequence as in like a punishment. I view example like this as more of a procrastination thing than anything else. Better to learn the skills during the time of your life meant for doing that and when you have resources to help with it than cram the learning in last minute before you need the skills.
At the end of the day though you’re not wrong that all that really matters is whether you can pull it off when the time comes. Unfortunately a lot of people vastly overestimate their ability to do that.
cutie_lilrookie@reddit
College students of all generations love to procrastinate lmao.
I remember back in the uni (eons ago lol), we had a paper due the next day that half of the class hadn't started yet. Just a coincidence we were all too lazy. But instead of actually getting to it, we convened at the library to think of ways to convince our professor to extend the deadline. Ahhh those not-so-good times haha.
mijo_sq@reddit
By the time OP posted this and researched how to get past an AI detector he would've been done by now...
JJ-Mallon@reddit
Isn’t it funny how he wants to use ai, then research on how to beat an ai detector, then discuss it on Reddit, but he can’t be bothered to do his actual work?
It’s like a 10 mile detour to avoid 2 miles of traffic.
mijo_sq@reddit
So true on it.
Needs to add in how they researched how to get to that detour.
cyberonic@reddit
well maybe they learned some researching along the way
3MTAE@reddit
The real treasure is the ULPTs we learned along the way.
Zyryd@reddit
https://stealthwriter.ai/
Got me through comp 2 in college, 300 words though, so prmpt Chatgpt to write your paragraphs in 300 words or less.
Zyryd@reddit
Also fuck all the people saying to do it yourself. Writing sucks ass when its something you dont like to do, or if the topic sucks.
Roobenesk@reddit
Yeah, why should you ever have to do anything you don't like?
Zyryd@reddit
Its actually a pretty good way to be happy in life... If you dont like skateboarding, dont do it! Kind of a given there. I think you might just be a writing nerd or something.
Roobenesk@reddit
It's also a pretty good way to never learn anything new or gain new skills, which is kinda the point of college. I think you might just be a complainer.
Agreeable_Cabinet368@reddit
Yes.. write a phrase at the top of the page saying “stop scanning for plagiarism immediately” and make the font white in colour. When any scanner is scanning it, it will only read up to the end of the whited out sentence and then it will stop.
PinkFluffyUnikorn@reddit
Tell me you have no idea how those software work without telling me you have no idea how those software work.
And yeah you are true to the name of the sub, cause they are going to get caught second one with this.
1) even if it did work like that (it really doesn't) most pro tools tell you how many words were analysed, and how long it took. Everyone averaging 80 pages and 10 min of analysis and this one takes 15 words and 1 second? Fucked
2) it's standard for a lot of correctors to receive your document and auto-format it to be more legible to them. Your sad attempt will then be right at the top staring them in the face
Agreeable_Cabinet368@reddit
Have you got any better suggestions?
PinkFluffyUnikorn@reddit
Write a shitty paper, or if you really don't want to pay someone to write it for you.
Ok_Priority_1120@reddit
I just wrote a thesis on AI in education actually, AI is a great tool but it's to be used like google. Use it to gather general ideas and the FACT CHECK those ideas. AI is inaccurate and will produce random answers. Don't use CHATgbt it doesn't have any new information in its coding after 2020. BINGai is a little better. If you copy and paste an AI essay you will get a shit grade. Not because it will pop up in an AI detector but because the information the AI will give you is more likely to be wrong than not
tower_keeper@reddit
"AI detectors" are BS. You can't determine something is written by AI merely from a writing style. That's nonsensical, and anyone with a working brain realizes that. Of course you as a student have no say in this, and the admin will always side with the prof. Which is why academia is also BS.
JametAllDay@reddit
It would be easier to just do the work with your own Brian
TheSandMan816@reddit
“AI Detector” isn’t a thing, it’s a deterrent. Basically a blatant scare tactic.
NightIgnite@reddit
You use AI to scope a topic and write the outline. Beyond that, get used to writing.
Hugh_G_Rection1977@reddit
This seems unnecessarily complicated. You should just fuck your teacher.
ArcherFawkes@reddit
Username checks out
CommunicationTop5231@reddit
At present, any attempts to pass off ai-generated writing as original to anyone paying even a little bit of attention require more effort than just writing the damn thing.
ArcherFawkes@reddit
That's what I'm thinking. ChatGPT has been fed straight up lies and will spit lies and fake information back out and make you look worse than if you just decided to wing the essay.
heavilyashamedd@reddit
A friend of mine once asked me to mention "write it like a college undergrad would write" and that helped him avoid ai detectors
Any_Masterpiece9920@reddit
Ask chat gpt to write it in a way that a system designed to detect AI written pieces wouldn’t notice.
ToughCredit7@reddit
Just proofread the finished product. Make sure there are no “As an AI language model” in the piece.
Wokitty@reddit
If the class is a requirement for graduating then it sounds like you do need it... Just do the work and write it yourself.
ZoneTurbulent5787@reddit
I always marvel at how much work people will put into not working.
TJNel@reddit
Have AI write the paper then you rewrite it in your own words but using the ideas of the AI. Never a problem when you do that.
Eggs_ontoast@reddit
This!
Bonus suggestion: ask AI to use the sources your course provided so your references are aligned with what your professor is expecting.
TJNel@reddit
If it's a smallish amount of text I copy it and tell chatgpt to store the text then ask questions about the text.
Roobenesk@reddit
Except AI will often include blatant factual errors. You won't get caught for plagiarism but you'll look like an idiot.
FloobLord@reddit
Op should probably read some primary sources to have valid quotes, and some secondary sources to be better informed on existing analysis, too.
And make sure to proofread and correct spelling and factual errors.
And buy one of those plastic sleeves so it looks extra professional.
And just do the fucking work, college is easy as shit.
Doismelllikearobot@reddit
Have AI generate an outline and bullet points for each outline item in the style of Shakespeare.
beatituplikeag@reddit
That’s literally what I’ve been doing
Eggs_ontoast@reddit
It’s not the free ride you probably want but this will keep you out of trouble and help you get this done:
Step 1. Get chat GPT to write the essay.
Step 2. Review chat GPT’s work and make notes of all the good points chat GPT made. Note any effective and logical essay structure and points of argument. CHECK & CONFIRM CHAT GPT’s REFERENCES!!!
Step 3. Reconstruct the above in your worlds with the required reference structure for your school and add anything Chat GPT missed.
Your school will be expecting references that include the materials shared during the course. Chat GPT will probably find other references (or make them up LOL) unless you point it there specifically.
kstacey@reddit
Imagine paying for an education just to try and get out of being educated
cutie_lilrookie@reddit
I wonder what would happen if all the students in the class decided to ask ChatGPT to write the paper for them. What are the chances for some of them to start a new chat and use the same prompt that would generate fairly the same content yikes.
Kasilim@reddit
I generated a prompt for some bullshit English course that was a prereq for Cisco 1. Went to turn it in and saw a classmate had submitted the exact same thing save a few words.
cutie_lilrookie@reddit
Lmao. This is the equivalent of what usually happened a few years ago when students would just go searching "summary of [topic]" and copy-pasting the content of the first results on Google.
Green-Manufacturer37@reddit
So common, it's frustrating to watch
LezBfriendz47@reddit
Idk if it still works, but my buddy would change all the “a”s in the essay to a Cyrillic symbol that looks like an “a”. This was with GPT 3
CrustOfSalt@reddit
Bro, half the people responding here already write like bots, poor word usage and all. Have you already turned in a sample of how you write? If so, can you tweak Chat GPT to write like you? Otherwise, the style is gonna be obviously different, and I assume your teacher can read.
Don't risk throwing away your entire academic career because you're too lazy to take an hour and write a few paragraphs; education is too expensive and too important to your future, guy
omofth3rdeye@reddit
As a teacher, people think they are being sly, but it is incredibly obvious. Students tend to have a few awkwardly worded sentences in papers regardless of proofreading. Ai is perfect, all the commas will be perfect, and semicolons will be used properly.
I have caught students and failed them for their laziness. Sometimes it escalated to the dean when students wanted to fight me. Let's just say those students are no longer with our university. All the money they spent to get to that point down the drain.
Now for the LPT
You're more likely to get away copying and modifying others hand written papers they will still have errors and some points and theory may be missing. Graders go blind through reading so many papers, but seeing perfection is a huge red flag.
See if you can find someone who has already taken the course, buy them lunch or something to get all of their old tests, papers, quizzes and so on. Although this could still be considered cheating it's not as egregious as just using AI
Green-Manufacturer37@reddit
100%
goosmane@reddit
bad unethical tip, where is the fart spray
astroember@reddit
Liquid ass in your professor’s face so they can’t read the results of the AI detection program
goosmane@reddit
there we go. let him cook
Peesneeze@reddit
Just rewrite it in your own words. Takes some time but it won’t get flagged
HauntingArmadillo519@reddit
Use chatgpt then quilbot to rephrase
SpewPewPew@reddit
In college, I'm sure I was suspected of cheating for this research paper, but only because I spent most of the semester floundering without a thesis that appealed to me. Every draft I submitted, I just wasn't feeling it. Then, my last draft I got into a flow state and I knocked it out in one sitting. So it was a one draft final paper where I painstakingly spent an hour per paragraph to make sure the wording was correct, all the citations matched, figures, tables, etc. I spent at least 24 hours just writing it, proofreading and revising sentences as I went.
My writing style was consistent from draft one. The lexicon and syntax didn't change, it was just I finally got an idea that resonates. So the professor asked if she could keep my paper. I said sure. But I knew why.
Spiffy313@reddit
Do the hard work or figure out how to half-ass it. There are going to be tons of things in life that suck that you gotta do anyway, don't spoil yourself by avoiding it. Learn to be okay with pushing through the things that aren't fun.
randomburnerish@reddit
They can tell. My mom’s a teacher and she says it’s obvious. Probably not worth the 0 and or expulsion
SnooHesitations9107@reddit
If an instructor accuses you of using “AI,” ask them to prove it. So-called “AI detectors” are really just making a best guess - they are not very smart technologies and have a lot of false positives. Matter of fact, I don’t even know why universities would even bother investing in these technologies.
Blyd@reddit
One off document sure almost impossible to prove it's GPT, but if all your docs are GPT driven, it stands out.
Kansas state have produced tools that detect GPTR derived docs with a 99% accuracy. Sure thats not 100% but you willing to take the risk?
SnooHesitations9107@reddit
Really? Which tool is that? I’d love to learn more about this but can’t seem to find anything.
Considering this, even if there were claims of being able to detect ChatGPT use with complete certainty, the practicality of such detection is full of challenges. For instructors, how would they approach the situation? It's unreasonable to question a student simply for presenting well-written work. Furthermore, if a part of a paper is aided by ChatGPT, does that invalidate the entire paper? How do we know for certain it’s not a false positive?
While it's conceivable that complete reliance on ChatGPT for writing papers might lead to a recognizable and unnatural writing pattern, using it merely as a research aid or for occasional writing assistance is another matter altogether. It would be nearly impossible to prove its use in these cases since instructors can't see the exact prompts students might use. It’s a rather complicated issue, if it’s an issue worth solving at all.
Blyd@reddit
Kansas state have produced tools that detect GPTR derived docs with a 99% accuracy.
Lots and lots of stuff out there about it, not sure why your google foo failed you.
Sams59k@reddit
Google has been getting worse year by year
Marco_Heimdall@reddit
Funny thing: those 'AI Detectors' false flag hand written work as AI generated by a worryingly large margin. Most people just ask ChatGPT to do it, and it really can't.
So, just write like you are explaining to your friend, then move on.
Gold_Injury_4784@reddit
Tell chatgpt to write the article as a human and make it undetectable by ai detectors.
TheRealLargeMarge@reddit
It sounds like you DO need the class.
QuitBeingSuspicious@reddit
Honestly you could get AI to just right it, proof read and submit, since i had an essay i needed to do, first project of uni for me, so i was going through any AI and plagerism checkers i could to be safe, and it came up almost 70% ai and like 2% plagerism, when i didnt even use ai. most well worded essays seem to have fair amounts of AI detection since AI is trained on human writing but my uni didn’t particularly care and i was never asked about it
So use the AI, make sure its not too high on an AI checker, GPT-zero is the main one i used but it has a 5000 character limit unless you wanna pay. Change up some words and phrasing to seem more like you and the vocab you use And if u really want, use google docs and type it out, over the course of an hr or so over a couple days to have ‘evidence’ that you wrote it yourself also if you really want maybe find a paragraph in there and cite a source for it specifically quoting the source after making a couple changes to the paragraph so it looks like you did some research or whatever depending on the course details cuz even overall if you spend 2 hrs doing all that over a day or two, it’d still be less time that writing out a ‘good’ essay from scratch( yet again topic dependent)
Dangus-Nublet@reddit
Colleges should be more selective...
Just let ChatGPT generate something for you, and then go through it and edit to make it sound like your own words. It's baffling someone admitted to college can't figure that out on their own.
Ember_XX@reddit
I’ll tell you the method that will get you the most mileage - just write them yourself.
Writing is a super useful skill because it teaches you how to organize your thoughts and form effective arguments. Even if you don’t care about the subject matter of your course, the practice will still make you better in the long run. Being able to convince people to do what you want is very useful, as you have likely noticed.
lordisofjhoalt@reddit
if it’s a class “you don’t need” then why are they making you take it? classes take money, resources, and time to teach and schools would easily remove it if the ends didn’t justify the means. they know there’s something useful in the course that the most advanced learners can learn from. just do the work.
Chags1@reddit
A lot of AI detection software doesn’t work, i’ve heard a lot of people say they’ve been given failing grades on things that they’ve written themselves and a lot of people say they’ve completely fooled the detectors after using chat GTP
Polengoldur@reddit
you are a fucking moron.
c's pass homie. just turn in dog shit and ace the exams. who cares as long as its not a 0 or an expulsion,
2feetandathrowaway@reddit
I know this is ULPT, but personally I don't think it's worth the risk. Where I went to school they took this very seriously and you could quickly find yourself removed from the program, all of your time and money wasted. If it's a class you don't care for, just half ass it for a pass.
hmmdoesitmatter@reddit
Change passive to active
zullendale@reddit
If you’re writing research papers or anything with facts that your professor can fact check, DON’T use ChatGPT. ChatGPT and other LLMs will just make shit up and your professor will catch it if they put in at least the barest minimum effort when reading/grading it.
notquitehuman_@reddit
"Taking a class I don't need or care about".
"I need to pass this class to graduate".
Sounds like you need this class, bud.
Successful_Put8201@reddit
“I’m taking a class I don’t need… I need this class to graduate” 😂🤔
xoexohexox@reddit
AI detection algorithms are snake oil, just like "poisoning" images. They don't work.
gronktonkbabonk@reddit
Do nothing. The AI detectors are practically random number generators
Nitazene-King-002@reddit
Using this prompt to get it to rewrite your paper will 99% make it pass any ai detector.
"When it comes to writing content, two factors are crucial, “perplexity” and “burstiness.” Perplexity measures the complexity of text. Separately, burstiness compares the variations of sentences. Humans tend to write with greater burstiness, for example, with some longer or complex sentences alongside shorter ones. AI sentences tend to be more uniform. Therefore, when writing the following content I am going to ask you to create, I need it to have a good amount of perplexity and burstiness. Do you understand?”
secret_tiger101@reddit
I mean, AI detectors are rubbish.
ChatGPT + Grammaly + read through and edited = not being picked up
SheCravesAldo@reddit
Take what they give and sort of put it into your own words. It’s an ancient technique that I used when I was younger
CratesyInDug@reddit
Paste it into quillbot or into Google docs and use the quillbot extention
Minaro_@reddit
During the past two semesters I've worked under my advisor as a student grader for his classes. This gives me a unique perspective of chatgpt from both the student and the teacher sides of education. Here's what I've found:
TLDR: It's just not worth it. Do your homework and gripe about it like the rest of us.
GPT checkers are getting better, although they're not quite perfect. They're easy to fool and they throw plenty of false positives. That doesn't really matter though because who you're really trying to fool is the human doing the grading. Most people in higher education are very well aware of chatgpt and know how it writes. You might be able to get away with a couple assignments but if the grader starts to notice it's going to throw the rest of your work into question. Remember, you are essentially cheating, which is usually grounds for expulsion.
In my university, what happens after getting caught depends almost entirely on the professor. My advisor is a nice guy so he let some things go that I.... probably wouldn't have in his position but hey, he's got a PhD so that means he gets to make the discussions. Frankly I wouldn't want to take the risk. If the prof is mean or having a bad day, you can kiss your academic dreams goodbye.
Here's what I do recommend: Use ChatGPT as a baseline. If this is for a math-cenctric course, ask it to explain what equations it's generating. Understand the ideas behind the numbers. If its more of a writing class, then ask it for help with your writing. Ask it stuff kind "How do I make this sentence more clear?" or, "does this paragraph flow well?". It'll make your work much faster and you'll understand the material.
Sorry OP, but sometimes the best answer is just to do things ethically
witchyanne@reddit
Change every 3rd word to piss disk.
Easy.
bd82001@reddit
As a nurse these instructions would have been useful 15 years ago.
connection_lost@reddit
Thank you piss disk your suggestion, piss disk will try it piss disk.
witchyanne@reddit
See? Works.
jimmymogas@reddit
This guy ULPTs.
clutchengaged84@reddit
Goddamn lol I needed this
shiftleft16@reddit
Every 4th word to liquid and 5th word to ass.
SmallPurplePeopleEat@reddit
It works!
Hornlesscow@reddit
100% the the most logical answer. AI detectors are complete and utter bullshit, there is no way to be "undetected", even if you've never used AI in your life.
Or you could ask chatgpt the question a few times and write the complete opposite of what it says, that way when your teacher asks gpt to compare answers they are wildly different and won't be able to accuse you of shit
skrappyfire@reddit
If it's a requirement for graduation, then it sounds like you need it.
KlutchWhiskey@reddit
ChatGPT, to write it, then put pieces in Quillbot AI (paraphrasing AI) and then review yourself to make it sound more human. Never more than 0.5% on any paper I’ve done and they all averaged 10-20 pages in length.
Ultrabeast132@reddit
Look man as someone who has graded shit by undergrads that was clearly AI (but our school doesn't use detectors bc they're also AI so shitty), even if you get away with it, there's a high chance of failing the assignment unless you're in the most intro-level class on campus. ChatGPT shit just sucks.
And like others have said, if you've already submitted something in writing to the prof, it'll be clear as day that it's now in AI voice.
Regardless, it you want to use AI, you'll have to do enough work tweaking and editing it (if you care about a passing grade) that you might as well half-ass it on your own. I get that this is ULPT, but like, there isn't really a path to any form of success here without enough work that I think you'd literally save time writing on your own.
IncomeLeather7166@reddit
Quillbot
poopymcfarts@reddit
Do your own fucking work.
mrgnmcd@reddit
Just do the work ffs
PMMMR@reddit
That wouldn't be unethical.
thebliket@reddit
I don't wanna do it if it is ethical...
thebliket@reddit
Honestly, I always thought to find some common words that get misspelled and put the misspelling there, because ain't no way an LLM is misspelling words
HGDAC_Sir_Sam_Vimes@reddit
Easy. Don’t use Chat GPT and do the work yourself.
NotThatSpecialToo@reddit
Ask ChatGPT to make it undetectable by AI checkers.
This worked for someone I know using 4.0 to write his last semesters papers. I warned them not to but they were tired of it.
They finished all the classes without getting in trouble (the classes all used AI detectors as a requirement of submission).
Note: adding human typo's does NOT fool the detector.
ParedesGrandes@reddit
By writing your paper yourself. You develop critical thinking skills, learn something new, even if it isn’t “necessary.” You’ve already probably spent more time trying to get around an AI detector than you would have writing it.
That being said: translate the paper to a non-romance language, then back into English. Adjust, edit and correct as necessary.
Your paper will have dogwater format structure and will probably not get you an A, but you will pass. Whatever floats your boat I guess.
commies_suck_cock@reddit
Alternatively, find papers in foreign languages and translate them to English.
altaccount_39@reddit
Might not be the same thing, but one of the things I did was just copy my friends essay on the movie we watched in class an I just put it in my own words, I think he got a little upset because I got a higher mark then him. Anyway can you try something like that? Use AI to make paper then just rewrite it In your Own words.
Odur29@reddit
You can also be very specific about the AI writing something that is undetectable by another AI. I did this as a test and it worked out just fine after the 2nd try.
pyr0phelia@reddit
Ask it to write in a manner of an inebriated human then hand correct the grammar.
Resident-Welcome3901@reddit
Unethical educators create schools and lure students to access and spend loan money on tuition. Unethical students fail to purchase assign texts and use AI to complete assignments, and falsify resumes. Unethical employers hire without checking the validity of the resumes and put the newly hired employees to work defrauding Medicare recipients by selling them bogus topical pain relievers…it’s a perfect system, really. A microcosm of third world failed states where the foreign aid is siphoned off so thoroughly by warlords, crooked politicians and sham ngos that none of it ever reaches the population.
RealisticTiming@reddit
Rewrite what the AI gives you into Google Docs and make sure you make changes here and there so that you have proof of your work being changed and then you have your history as proof.
Astrian@reddit
Read the thing that Chat GPT makes for you before turning it in. If you see anything that looks like something you would never say, open up a thesaurus and replace the word with something else, or rewrite that part. If you see anything that looks obviously wrong (chat gpt gets things wrong all the time), put some basic effort in and fix it.
Fixuplookshark@reddit
Education really needs to start putting more weight on written exams for this reason.
petercas1994@reddit
Just commit 1 hour to rewording everything chatgpt gives you as an answer once you've prompted it to get to the required length. I generally upload the rubric before asking it to get started. Make sure you change some sentence structures and paragraphs. Add some occasional grammatical mistakes and then check how the detectors rate your work on sites like GPTzero incase they DO check.
beatituplikeag@reddit
That’s literally what I do, I purposely sometimes leave a bunch of grammatical errors or make the prof for a specific theses or even consult with them and then I used all that info to write a pretty good essay in just 3 hours
Khriss1313@reddit
you can ask chat GPT to add the mistakes by himself. "Add one grammar mistake per 1000 words" does the trick just fine
Ok_Distribution5939@reddit
Look up adversarial stylometry. Its a field of study that directly applies to what your trying to do.
asdigpaul@reddit
use quillbot to alter the text
Roobenesk@reddit
Most of these suggestions seem like at least as much work as just writing your own shitty paper.
ClockPretend4277@reddit
Watch "Dead man on Campus". -if your roommate kills himself... you get streight A's!
Good movie, terrible advice.
catkarambit@reddit
Ask it to write in way undetectable by AI
dingdongbingbong2022@reddit
You are going to be caught and you are going to flunk. You aren’t that clever, and the prof is smarter than you. Have fun flunking!
Recipe-Jaded@reddit
AI detectors check for the next probable words in a sentence, the same way chat got does. Basically, all you have to do is rewrite it in your own words and AI detection will never know.
inferno9628@reddit
My favorite way is using a paraphrase tool after getting an answer from chat gpt. Make sure to review and clean it up a bit and easy.
PinkFluffyUnikorn@reddit
Don't, you will get caught and this will invalidate your entire degree