In the era of Artificial Intelligence, spelling errors prove that a text is human-written

While spelling errors in text were once considered unpleasant mistakes, today they are becoming a unique sign that a text was written by a human, not an algorithm. The Atlantic journalist Michael Waters notes that small, forgivable errors make correspondence feel more alive and build trust with the reader. This is reported by Ixbt.com reports .
Psychologists believe that people look for individuality, specific details, and a bit of disorder in texts—traits not typical of Artificial Intelligence models. As journalist Stephanie Steele-Wren puts it: "Humans are inherently messy and unique, while Artificial Intelligence is not." This is increasing the demand for texts where the author's personality is evident.
However, not everyone is striving for live interaction. For some users, technologies like ChatGPT have already become virtual interlocutors or even companions. Nevertheless, there is a growing need in society for the ability to choose between authentic and artificial communication.
Experts in digital media and psychology note that in an environment where it is becoming increasingly difficult to distinguish Artificial Intelligence from humans, even small errors are gaining new value. Now, such "flaws" are being perceived as the unique signature of a living author.













