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[return to "Researchers find evidence of ChatGPT buzzwords turning up in everyday speech"]
1. mrbonn+S7[view] [source] 2025-08-27 22:13:25
>>giulio+(OP)
I intentionally put spelling mistakes in my doc to let others know I'm not using ChatGPT. What a time to be alive in which small spelling or grammar mistake is a good sign of authenticity.
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2. dakiol+99[view] [source] 2025-08-27 22:21:20
>>mrbonn+S7
Same. Also, when asked for anonymity at work, I usually make mistakes that do not correspond to my native tongue (let’s say I’m french and working in an international company. I would write comments in a supposedly anonymous survey like “He ist like…” to camouflage myself as german).

It’s so easy to trick everyone. People who doesn’t do that is just too lazy. In slack, you cannot just copy paste a two-paragraph answer directly from chatgpt if you’re answering a colleague. They will see that you’re typing an answer and suddenly 1 sec later you sent tons of text. It’s common sense.

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3. antifa+iL2[view] [source] 2025-08-28 19:33:12
>>dakiol+99
Common sense would say that if you're writing a long message, you should draft it in a better editor than a chat program.
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