To succeed, invent a better way to cheat?
Student Cheating Is Becoming Impossible to Detect in an A.I. Era
The videos are all over social media, making students an irresistible offer: Go ahead and let A.I. do your homework — with the latest technology, you won’t get caught.
If you hate writing, you can avoid it.
Even established ed-tech companies are marketing with a wink and a nod.
These kinds of tutorials are now pervasive on TikTok and YouTube. They show students how to use tools known as humanizers and autotypers, which make it easier than ever to cheat. The videos — sometimes labeled ads, sometimes not — target college and high school students.
Humanizers rewrite A.I.-produced text to make it sound less robotic, formulaic and trite.
Autotypers slowly drip words and sentences into documents, making it appear as if papers were typed at a human pace when in fact, they were produced by A.I. They even fabricate typos, deletions and revisions.
Both tools can help students evade software designed to detect A.I.
Humans are fallible? What a concept!
https://thenextweb.com/news/amazon-human-in-the-loop-ai-governance-normalization-deviance
Amazon says human-in-the-loop AI oversight is failing because humans stop paying attention
Amazon’s security leadership is arguing against one of the most widely accepted principles in AI governance. Eric Brandwine, VP and distinguished engineer at Amazon Security, told The Register that human-in-the-loop oversight is not the gold standard companies think it is.
“Humans are not terribly consistent,” Brandwine said. “Human-in-the-loop isn’t necessarily the gold standard.”
His reasoning draws on a concept he has been talking about since at least 2017, when he gave a talk on normalization of deviance at AWS re:Invent. The term describes what happens when people in an organization take shortcuts over time, and nothing catastrophic results, so the deviant behavior becomes the new normal.
No comments:
Post a Comment