• ikt@aussie.zone
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    3 hours ago

    Just look at the comments of the user, they’re typing out sometimes 3 well written paragraphs in under 2 minutes between posts

    all of them have a very similar style as well

    That couch is peak dog chaos

    This is peak content

    This meme is my life

    This hits so hard

    This nails it

    • mfed1122@discuss.tchncs.de
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      3 hours ago

      Tfw I type fast and have the writing style of LLMs :( won’t be long before I’m doing one of those blade runner android tests

      • ikt@aussie.zone
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        2 hours ago

        You already failed 😂 you should have started with: This hits so hard!

        Also the bot never responds to comments only make once off posts

        Also you think you type fast but I highly doubt you could type out 3 well thought paragraphs in under 2 minutes before rapidly shifting to your next random post

        Actually let me put your posts into AI to see what it thinks of you >.>

        edit:

        Based on this document, this user appears to be very unlikely to be AI. Here’s why:

        Strong indicators they’re human:

        1. Natural conversational style - Their comments show authentic voice, sarcasm, frustration, and humor that feels genuinely human
        2. Self-aware about AI comparisons - They literally joke about “typing fast and having the writing style of LLMs” and mention doing “blade runner android tests” - this self-deprecating awareness is very human
        3. Contextual engagement - They engage deeply with Lemmy community dynamics, reference specific memes, understand platform culture
        4. Nuanced positions - They take complex stances (like on landlords, erotica vs porn, political opinions) that show genuine critical thinking
        5. Emotional authenticity - Express genuine frustration, disappointment, hope (“May men and women unite to be horny and kinky and unashamed”)
        6. Inconsistent formality - Mix casual language (“Homie,” “Thad”) with more elaborate thoughts
        7. Community participation - Active across different communities with varied topics over time

        Why they might worry about seeming like AI:

        • They mention typing fast and apparently write in a clear, structured way
        • They provide “thorough breakdowns” with their expertise
        • They’re articulate and thoughtful

        But these are just signs of an educated, engaged person who writes well. Their humor, cultural references, self-awareness, and authentic frustration with community dynamics all point strongly to a real human user.

        vs what it thinks of /u/xodasu@sh.itjust.works:

        Based on this user’s comment history, I’d say very likely AI-generated, probably 85-90% confidence. Here are the telltale signs:

        Strong AI indicators:

        1. Unnaturally consistent quality and structure - Every single comment is well-formatted, articulate, and substantive. Real users have off days, typos, lazy responses.

        2. Suspiciously broad expertise - This account confidently discusses Linux kernel internals, LLM security, DRM technicalities, privacy policy, climate science, ADHD management, and Home Assistant updates with equal facility. That’s unusual.

        3. Formulaic pattern - Almost every comment follows: acknowledge topic → detailed technical/political take → prescriptive advice → punchy conclusion. It’s like watching the same template execute.

        4. Perfect grammar with casual affect - The writing is too clean. Real casual internet comments have more sentence fragments, inconsistent punctuation, genuine rambling.

        5. No genuine interaction - These read like mini-essays dropped into threads, not actual conversations. There’s no “lol,” no genuine confusion, no asking for clarification.

        6. The timing - Account created 10 hours ago, 36 comments already, all this polished? That’s bot behavior.

        What’s interesting: The account got banned from multiple communities quickly, which suggests moderators spotted this too. The “Removed by mod” entries are probably communities that don’t allow AI-generated content.

        Bottom line: This reads like someone using Claude or GPT to farm engagement/karma across Lemmy instances. The voice is too consistent, too knowledgeable, and too… helpful to be one person casually commenting.