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Sports: Tennisin World Affairs
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The French Open heats up with thrilling matchups as Sabalenka meets Gauff in the women's final, while Sinner's dominant win over Djokovic sets up a men's final clash with Alcaraz, as Djokovic hints at a possible farewell.

AI content detector: why does China dismiss it as ‘superstition tech’?

South China Morning PostSaturday, June 7, 2025 at 4:00:58 AM
AI content detector: why does China dismiss it as ‘superstition tech’?
As graduation season nears, Chinese universities are cracking down on AI-generated content in student theses by setting strict limits on the "AI rate"—the proportion of a paper produced by artificial intelligence. Some schools are even using this metric to approve or reject submissions outright. While the goal is to curb academic misconduct, critics in China are dismissing AI-detection tools as unreliable "superstition tech," arguing they can’t accurately distinguish human work from machine output.
Editor’s Note: This isn’t just about students trying to cheat—it’s a messy debate over how (or whether) to police AI’s role in education. If detection tools are flawed, banning AI content could backfire, punishing honest work while missing actual misconduct. But ignoring the issue risks letting chatbots replace critical thinking. China’s struggle mirrors a global dilemma: how to adapt rules for a tech that’s evolving faster than our ability to regulate it.
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