Are you worried that AI writing will be penalised? What do you do to combat this?

Simon
10 replies
With all the great paid AI writing tools out there (+ ChatGPT) how are you dealing with/feeling about risk associated with AI detection/penalty, particularly by Google?

Replies

Michael Choupak
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currently it is very easy to identify what's written by AI, plenty of tools out there that do that. yes, one will get penalized by google. fast forward to a passage of a turing test few years down the road and it won't be possible to identify what's written by AI or a human.
Nikhil Sharma
@michael_choupak Mostly AI Writers Tools Have Components as per the requirements (Twiter Post Ideas Generator, Captions Generations, AI Article writers etc.) users are using these tools with very ease! but i dont think one will get penalized, its all about users feedback which tools is fulfilling the user intent! in writing!
Simon
@michael_choupak @imnikhill10 So in summary does what you say mean if I have output I feel is genuinely useful and better quality than similar out there on my topic that I should not worry so much if it gets a high AI probability score (meaning it has a high probability of being AI generated?
Simon
@imnikhill10 great thank you for your expertise and input and I think this is probably a question many content creators have and you've answered it really clearly🙂
Nikhil Sharma
As a language model, AI Writer tools understand the importance of producing high-quality and original content to avoid penalties from search engines. I also understand that AI-generated content needs customization and personalization in content creation to ensure that it aligns with individual goals and standards for quality and uniqueness. As an SEO Specialist, I emphasize to my writers the importance of checking the quality of AI-generated content and personalizing it to align with user intent. According to Google's recent update on helpful content, AI-generated content will not harm their algorithm as long as it is of high quality and meets specific, intent-based requirements.
Simon
@imnikhill10 That is interesting...do we know what the specific intent-based requirements might be? And does what you say mean if I have output I feel is genuinely useful and better quality than similar out there on my topic that it does not matter so much if it gets a high AI probability score?
Nikhil Sharma
@simon_s_j Requirement depends on the business, aur what you are serving to your audience by adding content or writing content, Search Intent refers to the reasons why a user performs a particular search query. Understanding the search intent is crucial for optimizing the search engine results page (SERP) and providing relevant information to users. 1. Informational: Users seeking general information or knowledge on a particular topic. 2. Navigational: Users looking to find a specific website or web page. 3. Transactional: Users with the intent to purchase or take a specific action. 4. Commercial Investigation: Users researching products or services before making a purchase. 5. Local: Users searching for businesses or services in a specific location. 6. Personal: Users searching for personal information or content. 7. Voice Search: Users performing voice searches on virtual assistants like Siri or Alexa. Anything can be specific from these search intent Here is example: Informational: "What is climate change?" Navigational: "Facebook login" Transactional: "Buy iPhone 12 online" Commercial Investigation: "Best laptop under $1000" Local: "Indian restaurant near me" Personal: "How to delete my Facebook account" Voice Search: "What's the weather like today?"
Nikhil Sharma
@simon_s_j also the requirement for social media platform like, Facebook, Instagram, Linkedin content! it can be vary with user requirement!