Conseils pour faire en sorte que ChatGPT contourne les détecteurs d’IA
Salut à tous, je joue un peu avec ChatGPT et j’essaie de trouver des moyens de rendre ses sorties plus naturelles et d’éviter ces outils de détection d’IA. J’ai…
Caleb Hunter
February 8, 2026 at 08:06 PM
Salut à tous, je joue un peu avec ChatGPT et j’essaie de trouver des moyens de rendre ses sorties plus naturelles et d’éviter ces outils de détection d’IA. J’ai pensé lancer ce fil de discussion pour partager des astuces et savoir si d’autres ont des idées intéressantes ou des expériences sur ce sujet. Plongeons-y !
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One weird trick I saw is to copy parts of real human-written texts and blend them in with ChatGPT output.
I’m curious if anyone knows any tools or websites that help test if ChatGPT output will pass AI detection?
Anyone tried using synonym swaps and avoiding overly formal words? I heard that helps but not sure how effective it really is.
Does anyone find that longer content is easier or harder for detectors to flag?
Does anyone else just manually rewrite ChatGPT’s output? Feels like the safest bet to me.
One thing I noticed is that AI detectors often flag perfect grammar. So throwing in a few small grammar mistakes helps it pass easier.
Sometimes the detectors just look for repeated phrases or patterns. So manually adjusting those can help a lot.
Honestly, just tweaking the phrasing and adding more human-like errors helps a lot. If you make it sound like a real person typing, it gets harder to spot as AI.
I've seen people mention that including some irrelevant or off-topic parts makes it look less robotic. Like adding little personal anecdotes or random thoughts.
I tried making ChatGPT write like a specific person I know, with their quirks and style. It feels less AI-ish that way!
Adding some emotional expressions or opinions makes the writing feel more genuine, which helps avoid flags.
Sometimes I run the text through a paraphraser after ChatGPT generates it, to mix things up a bit more.