ChatGPT Detector: How to Check & Make ChatGPT Text Undetectable
Comparison of ChatGPT Detection Algorithms
| Detection Name | Accuracy Level | Speed | Best Fit | Evaded by |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Turnitin AI | 98.7% | 3-5 sec | Academic papers | AI Humanizer Tools |
| GPTZero | 96.5% | 1-2 sec | Student writings | AI Humanizer Tools |
| Copyleaks | 95.2% | 2-3 sec | Professional texts | AI Humanizer Tools |
| Originality.ai | 94.8% | 3-5 sec | Publishing content | AI Humanizer Tools |
ChatGPT detection is now becoming increasingly common among students and bloggers. Here are some tips on how to avoid getting detected.
What Makes ChatGPT Writing Easy to Detect?
When you ask ChatGPT to write an article (regardless of whether it's the new GPT-3.5 or GPT-4), it produces statistically uniform content that's always well-formatted. To detect ChatGPT, algorithms consider:
- Repeated Vocabulary: ChatGPT has its unique lexical preferences. It tends to use clichéd expressions such as "It is important to remember," "delve into," "in summary," and "a testament to."
- Objective Writing Style: ChatGPT writing lacks subjectivity; it lacks idiomatic expressions, metaphors, etc.
- Standard Structure: The output of ChatGPT is nearly always presented in structured formats, consisting of H2 headings and neat bullet points in the conclusion.
How to Make ChatGPT Writing Indistinguishable From Human Writing
To avoid being detected by any algorithms if you generate text with ChatGPT:
- Alter Introduction and Conclusion: These are the key elements of the article because they carry significant weight both in human perception and algorithms' work. Use personal experiences here or insert opinions.
- Cut Down on Clichés: Run the text for any AI transition expressions and change their structure to natural ones.
- Make Texts Human-like: Use informal language and abbreviations where required.
- Use an AI Humanizer: The easiest way to evade detection is to refine the output with a dedicated AI humanizer tool that restructures sentence patterns.
Dr. Sarah Chen
AI Content Specialist
Ph.D. in Computational Linguistics, Stanford University
10+ years in AI and NLP research