
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this post Marcus Olang pushes back against the lazy idea that formal, polished prose is automatically a sign of AI, arguing that many so-called ChatGPT “tells” are also the marks of a very human education shaped by exams, colonial history, and the pressure to master English as a language of opportunity. It’s a sharp, personal defence of writers whose humanity is too easily misread by algorithmic suspicion.
https://open.substack.com/pub/marcusolang/p/im-kenyan-i-dont-write-like-chatgpt?r=67y1h&utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&utm_medium=web
By Readings of great articles in AI voices5
44 ratings
In this post Marcus Olang pushes back against the lazy idea that formal, polished prose is automatically a sign of AI, arguing that many so-called ChatGPT “tells” are also the marks of a very human education shaped by exams, colonial history, and the pressure to master English as a language of opportunity. It’s a sharp, personal defence of writers whose humanity is too easily misread by algorithmic suspicion.
https://open.substack.com/pub/marcusolang/p/im-kenyan-i-dont-write-like-chatgpt?r=67y1h&utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&utm_medium=web

91,090 Listeners

2,448 Listeners

850 Listeners

112,279 Listeners

214 Listeners

7,248 Listeners

6,450 Listeners

564 Listeners

5,554 Listeners

16,340 Listeners

12 Listeners

691 Listeners

405 Listeners

6 Listeners

1,146 Listeners