More than half of the internet is now AI-generated. Writers are being replaced, creativity is fading, and no one is stopping it. Will we realize what weāve lost before itās too late?
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Table of Contents
I donāt know how to make you care.
I donāt know how to make you look at whatās happening and feel the same sense of unease I do.
But Iāll try.
ChatGPT writing isnāt some distant, futuristic problem. Itās here. Itās already everywhere. More than half the internet is AI-generated now. News articles, personal blogs, even the emotional, heartfelt stories you think are written by real peopleāsome of them arenāt.
I saw a report that says generative AI could add $4.4 trillion to the global economy, but adoption is slower than expected. Thatās a fancy way of saying, āPeople arenāt using it as fast as we thought they would.ā
Like weāre dinosaurs refusing to evolve.
Like this is electricity or cars and weāre clinging to our lanterns and horse-drawn buggies.
But thatās not what this is.
This isnāt about resisting new technology. Itās about something deeper, something messier. AI isnāt just changing how we write. Itās changing what we believe. What we trust. What we think is real.
And if youāre a writerāor just someone who loves wordsāI need you to see whatās happening before itās too late.
I. The Shocking Reality: ChatGPT Writing Is So Human, Even AI Canāt Tell the Difference
Most people think they can spot ChatGPT writing. They swear they can tell when a sentence is ātoo robotic,ā when the words feel off, when the structure is too clean.
They canāt.
Jonathan Gillham, the founder of Originality.ai, says AI writing is already so human-like that readers canāt tell the difference. Even AI detection tools struggle to get it right. I wanted to believe he was wrong, so I ran some tests myself.
Test 1: Fiction That Feels Too Real
I asked ChatGPT:
Write a story about a woman who gets lost in the forest and realizes the forest is a metaphor for her fears, for how much sheās afraid of. Write in first person, around 500 words, using human sounding text.
It came back with a beautifully written piece. The kind that makes you stop and reread certain lines. It had rhythm, depth, emotion.

I ran it through 11 AI detection tools. Only 3 out of 11 flagged it as AI. The rest thought it was human.
āļø SurferSeo: 100% AI

āļø CopyLeaks: 100% AI

āļø GPTzero: 100% Probability AI generated

āĀ ZeroGpt: AI and Human

āĀ Scribbr.com: AI and Human

āĀ Quillbot.com: AI and Human

āĀ ContentDetector: AI and Human

āĀ Writer.com: 84% Human

āĀ Grammarly: 12% AI-generated

āĀ OpenAI Detector: 91.26% Human

āĀ PlagiarismDetector: 97% Human

Test 2: Grief, Written by a Machine
Next, I asked ChatGPT:
A man is sitting by his fatherās deathbed so his father doesnāt die alone. Heās filled with memories and feelings. Write a paragraph about his thoughts and feelings, in first person, with human sounding text.
The result? It sounded too human. Raw, heartbreaking, real.

Only 2 out of 11 AI detectors knew it wasnāt written by a person.
āļø SurferSeo: 100% AI

āĀ CopyLeaks: This is human text

āļø GPTzero: 100%Probability AI generated

āĀ ZeroGpt: 30.18% AI GPT*

āĀ Scribbr.com: 100% Human

āĀ Quillbot.com: 100% Human

āĀ ContentDetector: 37.50% AI

āĀ Writer.com: 88% Human

āĀ Grammarly: 100% Human

āĀ OpenAI Detector: 99.33% Human

āĀ PlagiarismDetector: 100% Human

Test 3: Poetry With No Heartbeat
I wanted to push ChatGPT writing even further. I gave it a prompt:
Scenario; A couple is in the kitchen while the wife cooks dinner. Sheās talking but her husband isnāt listening. She realizes he isnāt listening and never has. He just likes having a pretty wife to cook and clean for him. She realizes the marriage is over. Write a freestyle poem about that.
ChatGPT returned a poem that could have been written by someone who had lived through it. Painful, intimate, like it had been torn from someoneās journal.

Only 1 out of 11 AI detection tools flagged it as AI. The rest? They thought it was human.

The internet is already flooded with AI-generated text, and most of us canāt tell the difference. Even AI doesnāt always know whatās real anymore.
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II. When AI Detection Actually Works: Formulaic Content vs. Personal Writing
I wanted AI detection to work. I wanted somethingāanythingāthat could spot ChatGPT writing every time. And for a moment, it seemed like I had it.
I ran a test. I asked ChatGPT to write an article about SEO. Just a simple, straightforward explanation of why search engines matter. The kind of content youād see in a blog post written by some marketing intern.
Write a short essay, around 400 words, to explain the key points of seo to people who donāt understand why itās important or how it works

And guess what? 8 out of 11 AI detection tools flagged it as AI.
For the first time, I thought, Okay, maybe this works. Maybe AI detection actually has this under control.
But then I tried something else.
1. AI Struggles When Writing Feels Personal
I copied and pasted one of my own essaysāsomething real, something from my life. A piece about mistakes, regret, and the kind of stuff that keeps you awake at night.
I ran it through all 11 AI detectors.
Every single one said it was 100% human.
No hesitation. No mistakes. Just a clean, unanimous result.
And thatās when I realized something: AI detection doesnāt actually āunderstandā writing. It just recognizes patterns.
2. Formulaic Writing = AI. But Feelings? Thatās Different.
AI detectors are good at catching ChatGPT writing when it follows a formula.
-
A how-to guide? AI.
-
A listicle? AI.
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A corporate blog post about SEO? Definitely AI.
But when the writing feels rawāwhen it captures something realāAI detectors start failing.
And thatās the scary part. Because ChatGPT writing isnāt just copying formulas anymore. Itās learning how to sound like us.
For now, AI struggles with the messiness of human thought. The little contradictions, the doubts, the emotions that donāt always fit into perfect sentences.
But itās getting closer.
And if AI can start fooling not just people, but the very tools built to detect it⦠what happens then?
III. The Theft Behind AIās Writing Ability
I wish I could tell you that ChatGPT writing comes from a place of innovation or collaboration, but the truth is much messier.
The reason AI like ChatGPT writes so well is because it was trained on content it shouldnāt have had access toāstolen books, articles, and stories.
1. The Copyright Problem
When OpenAI trained ChatGPT, they didnāt go out and buy legal rights to all the material they used. They scraped it.
What does that mean?
It means content from copyrighted books, news websites, and other written works was taken without permission to build the model.
And now, the lawsuits are piling up.
2. Whoās Suing OpenAI?
Hereās a glimpse of the growing list of plaintiffs:
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Major news organizations like CBC, Postmedia, and the Toronto Star
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Famous authors, including John Grisham, George R.R. Martin, and Jodi Picoult
These lawsuits are about more than just money. Theyāre about stolen intellectual propertyāthe words and ideas these people worked years, sometimes decades, to create.
3. OpenAIās Defense
In court, OpenAI admitted that paying for legal, licensed training data would be ācost-prohibitive.ā
Translation: It was cheaper to take it.
But does saving money justify taking something that doesnāt belong to you?
What This Means for ChatGPT Writing?
Every time you read something generated by ChatGPT, youāre seeing the results of content that was never meant to be used this way.
Itās hard to separate the convenience of AI writing from the cost itās already had on creativity, journalism, and literature.
And the scariest part? The people whose work was stolen may never fully get it back.
IV. ChatGPT Writing Is Big BusinessāBut at What Cost?
OpenAI made $3.7 billion in 2024. Next year, theyāre projected to hit $11.6 billion.
Thatās the kind of growth that makes headlines, the kind that makes investors drool. But hereās the uncomfortable truth: this success wasnāt built on innovation alone.
It was built on stolen content.
1. Mass Profits, Mass Infringement
The core of ChatGPT writing lies in the vast amount of content it was trained onābooks, articles, essaysāmost of it scraped without permission.
OpenAI admitted in court that paying for proper, licensed training data would have been ācost-prohibitive.ā Instead, they just took it.
And now, writers, journalists, and entire industries are left wondering:
Where does this leave us?
2. The Good Side of AI (It Exists, But Itās Not Here)
AI isnāt all bad.
-
Itās helping doctors detect cancer earlier.
-
Itās giving deaf children tools to read and communicate.
-
Itās protecting endangered species by analyzing ecosystems.
These are the stories that make AI sound like a superhero. But ChatGPT writing? Itās not saving lives.
What itās doing is replacing human creativity with words borrowedāor outright stolenāfrom people who never agreed to be part of this.
3. A Dark Trade-Off
Hereās the problem: AI like ChatGPT makes billions, but the people whose work it relies on? They get nothing.
Imagine spending years writing a novel, only to find pieces of your work regurgitated by an AI in someone elseās blog post. Or a newspaper struggling to stay afloat, while AI uses its archives to generate cheap content.
Itās not just unfairāitās devastating to the industries that created the content in the first place.
4. Can We Afford This Success?
The rise of ChatGPT writing isnāt just about technology moving forward. Itās about who gets left behind in the process.
OpenAI is making billions, but at what cost? Human creativity? Journalism? Literature?
Weāre trading something deeply personalāour stories, our voicesāfor something efficient, and Iām not sure weāll like where it takes us.
V. The Internet is Already AI-Generated ā and Weāre Letting It Happen
I saw a number the other day: 57.1% of the internet is now AI-generated text.
Not “will be.” Not “might be.” Already is.
I thought maybe people would care. Maybe there would be some kind of pushback, some outrage. But mostly, thereās just⦠silence.
1. The Problem Isnāt That AI is Writing. Itās That No One Cares.
People like to act like ChatGPT writing is harmless. Just another tool, like spellcheck or Google Translate. But this isnāt about convenience.
This is about AI-generated content drowning out real voices.
Itās about fake reviews, soulless articles, and automated spam clogging up search results. Itās about real writers struggling to compete with something that doesnāt need sleep, a paycheck, or inspiration.
And still, no one seems to care.
2. AI-Generated Content Is Winning by Default
This isnāt happening because people love ChatGPT writing. Itās happening because itās easy. Itās fast. Itās cheap.
Companies donāt care if a blog post has depth or originality, as long as it ranks on Google. Publishers donāt care if an article has a real voice, as long as it fills a content quota.
And readers? Most of them donāt even realize theyāre consuming AI-generated text.
Conclusion: Will People Wake Up Before Itās Too Late?
āThe success and profitability of OpenAI are predicated on mass copyright infringement without a word of permission from or a nickel of compensation to copyright owners.ā
ChatGPT writing is everywhere now. More than half of the internet is AI-generated, and itās spreading fast. The problem isnāt just that AI is writingāitās that nobody seems to care. Writers, readers, and creators should be furious, but most people are scrolling past it like it doesnāt matter. Maybe they think itās harmless. Maybe they think itās inevitable. Maybe they just donāt want to fight a battle that already feels lost. But hereās the thing: this isnāt just about AI replacing writers. Itās about what weāre willing to lose. The internet used to be a place where real people shared real thoughts, where creativity had meaning. Now, itās being filled with machine-generated words, stripped of human experience. And if we donāt care enough to stop it, then maybe we deserve what comes next.
If you are interested in other topics and how AI is transforming different aspects of our lives, or even in making money using AI with more detailed, step-by-step guidance, you can find our other articles here:
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