AI Detector for Journalists
Maintain journalistic integrity by verifying sources and content authenticity
Journalists encounter AI detection from two sides: protecting their own bylined work from AI-suspicion accusations, and screening incoming sources, press releases, and pitches for AI-generated content. Both matter. The credibility of the byline depends on the first; the quality of the reporting depends on the second.
Why Journalists Need a Reliable AI Detector
Defending a byline against AI accusations
An accusation that a published piece was AI-generated can damage a reputation overnight. The cleanest defence is a contemporaneous detector report on the final filed copy plus version history.
Press releases are increasingly AI-generated
PR teams have adopted AI drafting. Running incoming releases through a detector helps you spot which sources are essentially regurgitating prompts.
Pitches and op-eds need vetting
Op-ed sections receive a steady volume of AI-drafted submissions. A detector pass is now part of the editorial review.
Quote integrity
Synthetic quotes — paraphrased or fabricated by AI — are an emerging hazard. Direct-quote verification (against recordings, not transcripts) matters more than ever.
How It Works
Scan filed copy at submission
Save a timestamped report alongside the published version. It's your evidence if anyone questions the byline later.
Screen incoming press releases
Heavily AI-generated releases tell you something about the source's standards. Calibrate your trust accordingly.
Verify direct quotes against recordings
Detectors can't catch synthetic quotes. Your recording can. Make recording standard for any sourced interview.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should journalists run their own copy through a detector?
Yes, especially if you write in a polished, formal voice that's vulnerable to false-positive flags. A pre-publication scan is professional self-protection.
Is it ethical to use AI for research synthesis?
Most newsroom guidance in 2026 treats AI synthesis the way it treats wire services: useful as a starting point, never the basis of a published claim. Verify everything through primary sources.
How do I handle an AI-generated press release?
Treat the AI-generated portion as a topic suggestion, not a quote. Reach out to the human source, ask for direct comment, and write the piece around the verified statements rather than the boilerplate.
What if a source claims their email was AI-generated to disclaim it later?
AI-generated emails from sources are a category of misdirection. If a statement comes from the source's official channel, it's their statement — regardless of whether they typed it themselves. Detection helps you decide how much weight to give it.
Are AI-generated photos / synthetic media a separate problem?
Yes — and most text detectors don't address it. Synthetic-media verification is a different toolset. For 2026, treat detection of generated text and detection of generated images/audio as parallel, not unified, workflows.
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