Original Reddit post

https://preview.redd.it/acttbk56gf3h1.png?width=640&format=png&auto=webp&s=acb9a8ae1f0892c8fc39d3c0cc968b1d2e0491b0 So Maggie Harrison over at Futurism just did a piece on this weird trend where people are intentionally leaving typos in their digital text. It’s basically their way of proving that whatever they wrote wasn’t actually generated by an AI. An analytics platform head named David Johnson ran a study checking 10,000 emails and found that 45% of the writers were purposefully making spelling and grammar mistakes. AI detectors like GPTZero keep flagging perfectly clean text as robotic, which is forcing people to change up how they write. For comparison, ChatGPT and Gemini usually hit around 99% grammatical accuracy, which gives their content that overly polished, academic vibe. A digital marketing specialist, Sara Cortes, pointed out that putting simple typos in corporate emails actually bumps up read rates by 15% because people just trust a real human more. Intentionally making mistakes is turning into the new way to prove you’re human in online communication. This whole thing is directly impacting the regular standards of professional writing, and it’s slowly dropping the demand for grammatically perfect content on the internet. Source: https://futurism.com/artificial-intelligence/typos-ai-humans-authentic submitted by /u/andrewaltair

Originally posted by u/andrewaltair on r/ArtificialInteligence