Latest from OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, Meta & more
16 stories
Turnitin, the plagiarism detection giant used by millions of students worldwide, has rolled out a new weapon against an escalating cat-and-mouse game: tools designed to catch AI writing that has been deliberately obscured to evade detection. The move represents a critical escalation in the battle over academic integrity as students increasingly turn to "humanizer" services that promise to make artificial writing indistinguishable from human work. For educators already struggling to maintain standards in the age of ChatGPT, the question now is whether Turnitin's latest detection capability actually closes the loophole—or simply kicks the technological arms race into the next round.
3 sources
This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters. If a California community college wants its faculty to be able to detect plagiarism and AI writing in student papers,...
We’re releasing a guide for teachers using ChatGPT in their classroom—including suggested prompts, an explanation of how ChatGPT works and its limitations, the efficacy of AI detectors, and bias.
Colombia's top criminal court cited AI detectors to reject a lawyer's appeal. An attorney then ran the court's ruling through the same software and got a 93% match.
This story was originally published by CalMatters. If a California community college wants its faculty to be able to detect plagiarism and AI writing in student papers, it can buy software from a ...
Learn about the new SynthID Detector portal we announced at I/O to help people understand how the content they see online was generated.