ChatGPT is creating headaches for schools while giving rise to a growing cohort of companies that say they can ‘tell’ human from machine
Since its release last November, ChatGPT has shaken the education world. The chatbot and other sophisticated AI tools are reportedly being used everywhere from college essays to high school art projects. A recent survey of 1,000 students at four-year universities by Intelligent.com found that 30% of college students have reported using ChatGPT on written assignments.
This is a problem for schools, educators and students – but a boon for a small but growing cohort of companies in the AI-detection business. Players like Winston AI, Content at Scale and Turnitin are billing for their ability to detect AI-involvement in student work, offering subscription services where teachers can run their students’ work through a web dashboard and receive a probability score that grades how “human” or “AI” the text is.
More Stories
Albania bans TikTok for a year after fatal stabbing of teenager last month
EU should spare carmakers from ‘punitive’ emissions fines, says Scholz
Will Japan’s close ties with US survive the caprice and quirks of Donald Trump?