Can Undetectable AI Bypass GPTZero?

Undetectable AI is a student’s number one ally against being falsely accused of using AI. So, how does it fare against an actual AI detector? Let’s find out in this battle against GPTZero.

John Angelo Yap

Updated June 26, 2024

A robot learning how to write like a person, generated with Midjourney

A robot learning how to write like a person, generated with Midjourney

Reading Time: 5 minutes

Whenever AI is on the news, it’s almost always about one of these three things: a new game-changing update to your favorite LLM, the jobs that are in danger in this era of artificial intelligence, and — unfortunately — whenever a student’s being threatened with academic sanctions for false positive AI detection.

The trouble with LLMs, especially in academe, is that there’s no reliable way of detecting AI-generated essays. On one hand, everyone agrees that AI detection is unreliable to begin with. On the other, how else can we mitigate cheating when ChatGPT and other AI chatbots are so accessible?

As a student, you need to be creative. That’s why I always recommend Undetectable AI to get rid of high AI likelihood scores and save your academic career.

But the question remains, how effective is it really? In this article, I’ll be comparing Undetectable AI to one of the best free AI detection tools in the market: GPTZero. Which one comes out on top? Stay tuned!

What is Undetectable AI?

Undetectable AI is an AI bypassing platform that’s created to humanize AI-generated text by removing common AI markers and adding human errors to simulate human writing. Undetectable AI also has other features such as an AI human typer and an AI detection tool that aggregates scores from eight different detectors.

It’s important to note that this tool isn’t to be used for cheating, and even the company behind it discourages using the paraphraser for academic dishonesty. Here’s a complete article on how to ethically use Undetectable AI.

What is GPTZero?

GPTZero is an AI detection tool developed by researchers at the University of Maryland. This platform analyzes the linguistics and writing patterns of a given text to estimate the probability that it was generated by an LLM. It does so by dissecting elements like word distribution, filler words, context inconsistencies, and more.

Of course, like any AI itself, GPTZero isn't infallible. As language models continue advancing, GPTZero and others like it will continue mistaking human writing for AI. This is a phenomenon called false positive, and it’s something that tools like Undetectable AI prevents.

How Does Undetectable AI Bypass Text?

AI bypassers such as Undetectable AI have two main features that allow them to hide from AI detection tools. The first is through a careful rearrangement of the original text and removal of certain AI markers such as monotonous sentence structure, common AI words, and lack of emotion.

The other way is by adding intentional human errors. This includes adding misspellings, improper grammar, and misplacing punctuation marks. While this makes for less AI likelihood score, it does make your input a lot more unreadable. For more information, I highly recommend this article.

Can Undetectable AI Bypass GPTZero?

Test #1

Undetectable AI: Successfully passes as human!
AI Likelihood Score: 18%

Test #2

Undetectable AI: Successfully passes as human!
AI Likelihood Score: 44%

Test #3

Undetectable AI: Successfully passes as human!
AI Likelihood Score: 44%

Test #4

Undetectable AI: Successfully passes as human!
AI Likelihood Score: 40%

Test #5

Undetectable AI: Successfully passes as human!
AI Likelihood Score: 18%

Test #6

Undetectable AI: Successfully passes as human!
AI Likelihood Score: 18%

Test #7

Undetectable AI: Successfully passes as human!
AI Likelihood Score: 17%

Test #8

Undetectable AI: Successfully passes as human!
AI Likelihood Score: 18%

Test #9

Undetectable AI: Successfully passes as human!
AI Likelihood Score: 33%

Test #10

Undetectable AI: Successfully passes as human!
AI Likelihood Score: 47%

Total AI Likelihood Score

Undetectable’s AI Likelihood Score

Test #1

18%

Test #2

44%

Test #3

44%

Test #4

40%

Test #5

18%

Test #6

18%

Test #7

17%

Test #8

18%

Test #9

33%

Test #10

47%

Average

29.7%

Overall Thoughts

Considering the stakes, both Undetectable AI and GPTZero did well here. The latter held its ground against a platform that’s made to counter it, a commendable effort especially since many of its contemporaries failed against the AI bypasser.

That said, Undetectable AI is just too powerful of a foe. Out of ten tests, it managed to completely disguise itself in six of them and have a mixed result for the other four. This is a great showing and a testament to how effective it is as a tool in your future arsenal. For me, it’s definitely worth the price.

The Bottom Line

Undetectable AI remains the ultimate defense against false positive AI detection. It’s honestly mind-blowing how something so simple can be this effective. However, there’s still something that you have to consider:

It’s not perfect.

Like I mentioned earlier in this article, Undetectable AI only works this well because they intentionally add human-like mistakes to your input. While this may be enough to fool GPTZero and other detectors, it’s also enough to raise eyebrows especially in the academic community.

You must use Undetectable AI responsibly and intelligently. In other words, know the difference between AI and human writing whenever you’re correcting Undetectable AI’s grammar. This will save you a lot of time in the future.

Want to learn more about Undetectable AI? This article is a great start. Have fun!

Want to Learn Even More?

If you enjoyed this article, subscribe to our free newsletter where we share tips & tricks on how to use tech & AI to grow and optimize your business, career, and life.


Written by John Angelo Yap

Hi, I'm Angelo. I'm currently an undergraduate student studying Software Engineering. Now, you might be wondering, what is a computer science student doing writing for Gold Penguin? I took up studying computer science because it was practical and because I was good at it. But, if I had the chance, I'd be writing for a career. Building worlds and adjectivizing nouns for no other reason other than they sound good. And that's why I'm here.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

0 Comments
Most Voted
Newest Oldest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments