12 Articles on Cheating with AI & AI Detectors

The Trouble With AI Writing Detection – Inside Higher Ed

College application season is here. So is the struggle to find out if AI wrote students’ essays – Cal Matters 

If using ChatGPT to write essays becomes widespread, those students who elect not to use it, who prefer to do the work themselves, may suffer a penalty for doing so. – Chronicle of Higher Ed

Results of a new survey flip the early narrative on ChatGPT—that students would rush to use it to cheat on assignments and that teachers would scramble to keep up—on its head. Half of students, ages 12-18, said they have never used ChatGPT. – Ed Week

OpenAI debates when to release its AI-generated image detector – Tech Crunch

Universities Rethink Using AI Writing Detectors to Vet Students’ Work – Bloomberg 

Identifying AI’s flaws motivates students and helps them build confidence, which can discourage cheating. Pointing out where it still really messes up is very powerful for empowering students to see their own strengths as human thinkers. – Chronicle of Higher Ed

Students cheat out of desperation so one professor will give multi-level assignments that force students to submit papers at various stages to keep track of their progress. – Yahoo News

The AI Detection Arms Race Is On And college students are developing the weapons, quickly building tools that identify AI-generated text—and tools to evade detection. – Wired

Simply leaving it up to students to decide whether they’re going to do the work, without further comment or intervention or negative sanction from me, is a failure of pedagogy. – Chronicle of Higher Ed

AI detectors have low efficiency, and simple modifications can allow even the most robust detectors to be easily bypassed. – Science Direct 

Suspicion, Cheating & Bans: AN Hits America's Schools (podcast) – New York Times

15 Webinars This Week about Journalism, AI, Social Media, The First Amendment & More

Mon, Oct 23 - The Defamation Machine

What: If corporations can be human enough to be held liable for defamation, why can’t computers?

Who: Professor James Grimmelmann, Tessler Family Professor of Digital and Information Law, Cornell Tech and Cornell Law School.

When: 7 pm, Central

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: University of Minnesota School of Journalism and Mass Communication

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Mon, Oct 23 - Reporting While Blind

What: The event will begin with a screening of a nine-minute ESPN documentary on blind baseball writer Ed Lucas's life named 'The Visionary.' Afterward, there will be a 90-minute discussion.

Who: Allison Lucas, the widow of the blind baseball writer Ed Lucas, is the president of the Ed Lucas Foundation, which supports the blind and visually impaired. She’ll discuss her husband's career in a conversation with Nick Hirshon, associate professor of communication at the William Paterson University.

When: 2:15 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Society of Professional Journalists

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Mon-Tue, Oct 23/24 - Social Media, Race, and Community Knowledge Practices An Interdisciplinary Conference  

What: How are racialized communities using social media to construct knowledge? How are social media platforms facilitating

Who: Karlos K. Hill is Advisor to the President for Community Engagement and Regents’ Associate Professor of African and African American Studies at the University of Oklahoma; Sherri Irvin is Presidential Research Professor of Philosophy and Women’s and Gender Studies and Senior Associate Dean of the Graduate College at the University of Oklahoma; Jeong-Nam Kim University of Oklahoma, Fellow at the Data Institute for Societal Challenges; Lawrence Ware is a Teaching Assistant Professor in the philosophy department at Oklahoma State University.

When: 10 am – 4:30 pm

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: The University of Oklahoma

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Tue, Oct 24  - The Rise of Generation Alpha: What Marketers Need to Know

What: You’ll find out the four influences having the biggest impact on Alpha’s state of childhood, who they will grow up to be and their life experiences along the way. The societal forces shaping what it means to be a parent today, and the relationship parents pursue with their kids. Tactical ways for brands to authentically connect with a new generation of kids

Who: Mary Kate Callen VP, Audience Impact & Intelligence Paramount; Margie Papa Sr. Director, Audience Impact & Intelligence  Paramount; Alexander Cammy Manager, Audience Impact & Intelligence Paramount.    

When: 1 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Paramount Advertising, Nickelodeon

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Tue, Oct 24 - ChatGPT Prompts for Grant Writing, Fundraising, and Marketing

What: How ChatGPT can revolutionize your grant writing, fundraising, and marketing endeavors. From understanding the AI’s capabilities to crafting compelling grant applications, this webinar offers a comprehensive look at cutting-edge techniques.

Who: Lisa Quigley, Tapp Network, Director Of Account Strategy; Tareq Monuar, Web Developer

When: 12 pm, Central

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: TechSoup

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Tue, Oct 24 - Emerging Social Media Trends 

What: You’ll walk away with: What are the biggest social marketing trends. What are the Small Business social media trends on the horizon. Tips and tricks to get started with some of these social networks, and marketing strategies and tactics.

Who: Ray Sidney-Smith, CEO, W3 Consulting

When: 10 am, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: $35

Sponsor: Duquesne University

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Wed, Oct 25 - Media Literacy and Mental Health

What: Join us for this discussion on the relationship between robust media literacy skills and student mental health, and how educators can prioritize student wellbeing and social-emotional learning when introducing media literacy resources. A panel of educators will share how they teach media literacy and current events in their classroom, how they prioritize mental health during their students’ learning journeys, and how it has impacted their students. 

Who: Pulitzer Center Teacher Fellows Karen Sojourner, a high school teacher in Kansas City, Missouri; Lisa Holewa, an elementary school teacher and former journalist in San Mateo, California; and Michelle Dueñas Mowery, a high school teacher in Chicago, Illinois.  

When: 7 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Philadelphia Higher Education Network for Neighborhood Development (PHENND)

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Thu, Oct 26 - Trauma-informed journalism

What: From the rising prevalence of mass shootings to daily crime coverage, journalists frequently encounter and interview victims of trauma. Cherry will discuss her research project that produced educational materials for journalists on working with these victims in a trauma-informed way.

Who: Tamara Cherry spent 15 years as a crime reporter for the Toronto Star, Toronto Sun, and CTV News Toronto.

When: 12 pm, Mountain Time

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Society of Professional Journalists

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Thu, Oct 26 – Journalism's Role in Architectural Communication

What: A thought-provoking online discussion on how journalism plays a pivotal role in shaping and communicating the stories behind architectural projects. Discover how the power of words and storytelling converges with the world of design and construction, influencing not only our understanding and appreciation of architecture but also demonstrating why attracting press and media coverage is vital for entrepreneurs and designers looking to showcase their work to the world.  

Who: Peter Murray, Chairman of New London Architecture and the London Society; Rose Marshall, Associate Director at ING Media; Marisa Santamaria, Researcher, curator, journalist, professor; Jerónimo van Schendel is the Director of the Master in Business for Architecture and Design at IE School of Architecture and Design.

When: 12 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: IE University School of Architecture & Design

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Thu, Oct 26 -Brand Journalism for PR Agencies

What: The nuances of brand journalism, and how to get it right for your clients. The session will cover: Why brand journalism is more than on-message corporate blogs. The secret of creating content with a journalistic style. How content marketing can help clients build their audiences.

Who: Natasha Netschay Davies Owner & Chief Strategist, Moonraker PR

When: 1 pm, Central

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Agency Grind

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Thu, Oct 26 - Key First Amendment cases before the Supreme Court

What: First Amendment cases before the Supreme Court this term, including cameras in the courts, the Trump trial in D.C., Justice Thomas and his quest to overturn Times v. Sullivan.

Who: Award-winning Supreme Court and legal journalist Chris Geidner, who is known as the Law Dork.

When: 12 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Society of Environmental Journalists, East Tenn. Pro Chapter

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Thu, Oct 26 - How To Cover Conservation Technology

What: Our panel will give reporters story tips and important guidance for their reporting.

Who: An expert panel of conservation technologists and Mongabay’s own conservation tech coverage specialist, Abhi Kidangoor.

When: 10 am, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Society of Environmental Journalists

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Thu, Oct 26 - The AI Advantage: How nonprofits can rise to the top using AI

What: In this session, we’ll explore the incredible ways AI is transforming nonprofit operations, covering everything from fundraising to donor engagement, program optimization to impact measurement.  We’ll dive into ChatGPT and how it can benefit your fundraising teams, automation that can free up time in your day, and more AI programs that can enhance the great work done by your fundraising team. We’ll uncover how AI-driven analytics can provide valuable insights into your database, empowering you to make informed decisions and maximize your impact on the communities you serve.

Who: Nejeed Kassam is the CEO and founder of Keela – an impact technology company dedicated to empowering nonprofits with accessible, powerful software.

When: 1 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Charity Villiage

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Fri, Oct 27 - Sustaining Your Long-Form Journalism Career Webinar

What: Learn how to sustain your career through fellowships, editor relationships, strategically choosing assignments, and finding a community. Current and former freelancers will share the reality of making a living while doing meaningful work.

Who: Jeaah Lee, Independent Journalist; Sarah Carr, Independent Journalist; Fernanda Santos, Editor & Leader Digital & Audio; Cerise Castle, Independent Journalist.

When: 11 am, Central

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: The Institute for Independent Journalists

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Fri, Oct 27 - National NewsLitCamp with Report for America

What: A free professional development experience focusing on essential new literacy topics.

Who: Tiana Woodard of The Boston Globe; Kim Kleman, executive director of Report for America; Middle school librarian Cathy Collins; Becca Savransky, an education reporter at the Idaho Statesman; DeMario Phipps-Smith, NLP’s senior manager of community learning; Tom Rosenstiel, professor at the University of Maryland Philip Merrill College of Journalism, and more.

When: 8 am – 5 pm, Central

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: News Literacy Project, Report for America

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Status quo Bias

Should you stay or should you go? Status quo bias is our tendency to, when presented with a choice, prefer the current scenario as opposed to making a change. You can account for this natural bias by reversing the situation and the direction of change.

Status quo bias stems from a variety of human tendencies. A natural fear of change, our preference for familiarity, and laziness, all contribute. It's not our friend, either: Status quo bias contributes to many poorly thought decisions (like our tendency to overspend on big purchases).

Consider this: would you take a $13,000 wage increase to relocate to another city? Most people would say no. Yet consider the opposite: If you were living in another city, would you take a $13,000 wage decrease to move back to this one?

You can apply this reversal heuristic to smaller decisions, too. For example, instead of wondering whether you should spend a dollar for a chocolate bar, you could ask yourself whether you'd be willing to receive a dollar for skipping a chocolate bar for the day.

This quick reversal is a simpler version of the Reversal Test, a mental tool philosophers use to account for status quo bias.

Herbert Lui writing in LifeHacker

Problems are Signals

Americans in general have always admired growth. We admire the fastest growing companies and the cities that grew the most in the past decade. Magazines list the national economics that are growing the fastest. Bigger is better and bigger-faster is better still.

There is another kind of growth, which is much harder to measure. Its goal is not an increase in size (or intelligence or sophistication or experience or skill), but simply ripening. We overcome the barrier to growth as development when we are able to view our problems as signals that it is time to let go of the way in which we have been seeing and doing things and initiate a developmental transition.

The barriers to this kind of growth are overcome whenever we stop viewing our flaws and problems as things to be solved or removed and start viewing them as signals. What the problems are, really, are old solutions that have outlived their usefulness. From that point of view, whenever we do away with a problem instead of listening to its message, we trigger a string of events that lands us in trouble.

William Bridges, The Way of Transitions

6 Free Webinars this Week about Journalism & AI

Mon, Oct 16 - How to Cover Indigenous Stories as a Non-Indigenous Journalist 

What: A panel discussion on how reporters can best cover Indigenous communities and why having Indigenous reporters in newsrooms is essential.

Who: Anna V. Smith is an associate editor at High Country News, Matteo Cimellaro is mixed race journalist of Cree and Settler ancestry, Brittany Guyot was the third recipient of the CAJ/APTN Indigenous Investigative Fellowship and is now an Investigative Reporter with APTN Investigates.

When: 6 pm, Central

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Uproot Project

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Wed, Oct 18 - The NYTimes & the Transformation of Journalism in the Digital Age 

What: Politics & the transformation of journalism in the digital age 

Who: NY Times political correspondent Adam Nagourney & Patt Morrison  

When: 5 pm, Pacific

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Jews United for Democracy and Justice and Community Advocates

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Wed, Oct 18 – Police Intimidation of the Press: The Marion, KS Search & Seizure Outrage

What: Public officials probably don’t miss the watchdog function of the press in light of the violation of press freedom in Kansas earlier this year. And perhaps some of their constituents have forgotten the benefits of a robust Fourth Estate. Violations of both the First and Fourth Amendment Constitutional rights now worry some in the media. Accusations of 'fake news' undermine media credibility and create combativeness by public officials to challenge the legitimacy of a free press.

Who: Walter Smith Randolph is Connecticut Public Broadcasting’s investigative editor; Eric Meyer is the majority owner, editor, and publisher of the Marion County Record in Marion, Kansas; Dean Pagani is a professor of communications at the University of New Haven; Paul Bass has been a reporter and editor in New Haven for 45 years; Caitlin Vogus, a 2010 graduate of Harvard Law School, is the deputy director of advocacy at Freedom of the Press Foundation.

When: 7 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: The Harvard Law School Association of Massachusetts and the Harvard Club of Kansas City

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Thu, Oct 19 - The Israel - Gaza Conflict: What Journalists Covering War Should Know

What: Journalists on the ground and from afar are reporting on the fast-developing Israel-Gaza war.  What’s important to consider in the coverage? How can you cut through the disinfo?

Who: Multimedia journalist Michael Lipin, who covers international affairs as a Voice of America bridge editor;Steven Youngblood, who is the founding director of the Center for Global Peace Journalism at Park University in Parkville, Missouri.

When: 12 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: International Center for Journalists

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Thu, Oct 19 - AI for Nonprofits: What You Need to Know

What: A closer look at the latest generation of AI. You'll learn what these tools can do for your mission-focused work and the need to use them in a thoughtful, responsible manner. You'll come away with a better understanding of what AI is, the different kinds of AI that exist, use cases for nonprofits, and thoughtful strategies for this emerging tech. 

Who: Joshua Peskay & Destiny Bowers of RoundTable Technology.

When: 12 pm, Central

Where: Teams

Cost: Free

Sponsor: TechSoup

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Fri, Oct 20 - Covering campaign finance and lobbying

What: The basics of how to cover campaign finance and lobbying.

Who: OpenSecrets' research experts Anna Massoglia, editorial and investigations manager and Pete Quist, deputy research director.

When: 11:30 am, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: National press club journalism institute, Open Secrets

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The Bitter Lesson

There’s a famous essay in the field of machine learning known as “The Bitter Lesson,” which notes that decades of research prove that the best way to improve AI systems is not by trying to engineer intelligence but by simply throwing more computer power and data at the problem. The lesson is bitter because it shows that machine scale beats human curation. And the same might be true of the web. Read more at The Verge

The Tonic

Unselfish love for others is a tonic to the soul. At this very moment, someone needs you to care for him. Without you, his life may be incomplete. It could be a member of your family; possibly it is your neighbor or the person with whom you work. You see, you really do not have time to indulge in self-pity because of your past failures; already too many are stuck in the mud of self-pity, and they need you to lift them out of despair.  

Larry Kennedy, Down With Anxiety

15 Articles about the Ethics of AI

15 Things people are trying to get AI to do–from solving crime to detecting wildfires

Can A.I. solve rape cases? To find out, a Cleveland professor programmed a computer to analyze thousands of police reports -Cleveland.com

Some in the (book) publishing world are already experimenting with AI programs in areas such as marketing, advertising, audiobook production and even writing, weighing their promise of supporting work done by humans against the threat that the machines ma. -NY Times

AI-powered technology may also help revitalize endangered languages, including by processing and storing languages and identifying language patterns. Additionally, AI may help accomplish these tasks at unprecedented speeds or just in time, before an endangered language goes extinct. -Inside Higher Ed 

Many in publishing are taking action to protect their work. The Authors Guild recently organized a petition signed by thousands of writers demanding that companies seek their approval before using their work to train A.I. programs. New York Times

Text With Jesus replicates an instant messaging platform, with biblical figures impersonated by the artificial intelligence program ChatGPT. The launching of the app stirred reactions ranging from amusement to accusations of blasphemy and heresy. -Religious News Service

Can ChatGPT become a content moderator? The technique is still not as effective as experienced human moderators, OpenAI found. But it outperforms moderators that have had light training.-Semafor

Can A.I. Detect Wildfires Faster Than Humans? California Is Trying to Find Out. -New York Times

AI providers begin to explore new terrain: chatbots in salary negotiations – Axios 

Coca-Cola launches beverage created with the help of artificial intelligence -Food Dive  

Get Ready for AI Chatbots That Do Your Boring Chores - Wired 

Alexa, will generative AI make you more useful? -Semafor  

Can AI predict, and try to prevent, homelessness? -NPR

ChatGPT was allegedly used to generate an apology statement about The Lord of the Rings: Gollum - TechRadar

Best Free & Paid AI Resume Builders: Build a Resume in Minutes - Tech.co

Multinationals turn to generative AI to manage supply chains - Financial Times

It’s All in the Attitude

Several years ago on an extremely hot day, a crew of men were working on the road bed of the railroad when they were interrupted by a slow moving train. The train ground to a stop and a window in the last car – which incidentally was custom make and air conditioned – was raised. A booming, friendly voice called out, “Dave, is that you?” Dave Anderson, the crew chief called back, “Sure is, Jim, and it’s really good to see you.” With that pleasant exchange, Dave Anderson was invited to join Jim Murphy, the president of the railroad, for a visit. For over an hour the men exchanged pleasantries and then shook hands warmly as the train pulled out.

Dave Anderson’s crew immediately surrounded him and to a man expressed astonishment that he knew Jim Murphy, the president of the railroad as a personal friend. Dave then explained that over 20 years earlier he and Jim Murphy had started to work for the railroad on the same day. One of the men, half-jokingly and half seriously asked Dave why he was still working out in the hot sun and Jim Murphy had gotten to be president. Rather wistfully, Dave explained, “twenty-three years ago I went to work for $1.75 an hour and Jim Murphy went to work for the railroad.”

Zig Ziglar, See You at the Top