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#grammarly — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #grammarly, aggregated by home.social.

  1. AI tools are software applications that leverage artificial intelligence, machine learning, and natural language processing to automate tasks, generate content, analyze data, and simulate human intelligence. Here are 10 free AI tools for writing, research, coding, and productivity on Windows and the web.

    #aitools #artificialintelligence #chatgpt #ClaudeAI #PerplexityAI #Gemini #Copilot #grammarly #Quilbot #DeepSeek #bingimagecreator #technology #tech

  2. AI tools are software applications that leverage artificial intelligence, machine learning, and natural language processing to automate tasks, generate content, analyze data, and simulate human intelligence. Here are 10 free AI tools for writing, research, coding, and productivity on Windows and the web.

    #aitools #artificialintelligence #chatgpt #ClaudeAI #PerplexityAI #Gemini #Copilot #grammarly #Quilbot #DeepSeek #bingimagecreator #technology #tech

  3. AI tools are software applications that leverage artificial intelligence, machine learning, and natural language processing to automate tasks, generate content, analyze data, and simulate human intelligence. Here are 10 free AI tools for writing, research, coding, and productivity on Windows and the web.

    #aitools #artificialintelligence #chatgpt #ClaudeAI #PerplexityAI #Gemini #Copilot #grammarly #Quilbot #DeepSeek #bingimagecreator #technology #tech

  4. AI tools are software applications that leverage artificial intelligence, machine learning, and natural language processing to automate tasks, generate content, analyze data, and simulate human intelligence. Here are 10 free AI tools for writing, research, coding, and productivity on Windows and the web.

    #aitools #artificialintelligence #chatgpt #ClaudeAI #PerplexityAI #Gemini #Copilot #grammarly #Quilbot #DeepSeek #bingimagecreator #technology #tech

  5. AI tools are software applications that leverage artificial intelligence, machine learning, and natural language processing to automate tasks, generate content, analyze data, and simulate human intelligence. Here are 10 free AI tools for writing, research, coding, and productivity on Windows and the web.

    #aitools #artificialintelligence #chatgpt #ClaudeAI #PerplexityAI #Gemini #Copilot #grammarly #Quilbot #DeepSeek #bingimagecreator #technology #tech

  6. "It’s true that citing the names of specific people can be a powerful way of shaping an LLM’s response. Plenty of prompts start by telling Claude something like, “You are ________, the world’s leading expert in ___________.” You could ask ChatGPT: “Rewrite this essay in a spare, understated style using clear, direct language and short sentences, favoring simple vocabulary over ornate phrasing, emphasizing concrete details and action over explanation, avoiding abstraction and sentimentality, and conveying emotional depth indirectly through precise, unadorned prose.” Or you could just type “Rewrite this like Ernest Hemingway” and save some keystrokes.1

    But does that LLM’s response mean the Hemingway estate is now owed money? And does Grammarly saying “This suggestion is inspired by Joshua Benton’s ‘Nieman Journalism Lab analyses'” mean Mehrotra owes me a steak dinner?

    Check out the full Decoder episode to hear their vigorous back-and-forth over how, as Patel puts it, “people don’t understand the difference between copyrights and trademarks and names and likeness,” and that “AI is collapsing those differences faster than ever before.”"

    niemanlab.org/2026/03/grammarl

    #AI #GenerativeAI #LLMs #SuperHuman #Grammarly #Copyright #IP

  7. "It’s true that citing the names of specific people can be a powerful way of shaping an LLM’s response. Plenty of prompts start by telling Claude something like, “You are ________, the world’s leading expert in ___________.” You could ask ChatGPT: “Rewrite this essay in a spare, understated style using clear, direct language and short sentences, favoring simple vocabulary over ornate phrasing, emphasizing concrete details and action over explanation, avoiding abstraction and sentimentality, and conveying emotional depth indirectly through precise, unadorned prose.” Or you could just type “Rewrite this like Ernest Hemingway” and save some keystrokes.1

    But does that LLM’s response mean the Hemingway estate is now owed money? And does Grammarly saying “This suggestion is inspired by Joshua Benton’s ‘Nieman Journalism Lab analyses'” mean Mehrotra owes me a steak dinner?

    Check out the full Decoder episode to hear their vigorous back-and-forth over how, as Patel puts it, “people don’t understand the difference between copyrights and trademarks and names and likeness,” and that “AI is collapsing those differences faster than ever before.”"

    niemanlab.org/2026/03/grammarl

    #AI #GenerativeAI #LLMs #SuperHuman #Grammarly #Copyright #IP

  8. "It’s true that citing the names of specific people can be a powerful way of shaping an LLM’s response. Plenty of prompts start by telling Claude something like, “You are ________, the world’s leading expert in ___________.” You could ask ChatGPT: “Rewrite this essay in a spare, understated style using clear, direct language and short sentences, favoring simple vocabulary over ornate phrasing, emphasizing concrete details and action over explanation, avoiding abstraction and sentimentality, and conveying emotional depth indirectly through precise, unadorned prose.” Or you could just type “Rewrite this like Ernest Hemingway” and save some keystrokes.1

    But does that LLM’s response mean the Hemingway estate is now owed money? And does Grammarly saying “This suggestion is inspired by Joshua Benton’s ‘Nieman Journalism Lab analyses'” mean Mehrotra owes me a steak dinner?

    Check out the full Decoder episode to hear their vigorous back-and-forth over how, as Patel puts it, “people don’t understand the difference between copyrights and trademarks and names and likeness,” and that “AI is collapsing those differences faster than ever before.”"

    niemanlab.org/2026/03/grammarl

    #AI #GenerativeAI #LLMs #SuperHuman #Grammarly #Copyright #IP

  9. "It’s true that citing the names of specific people can be a powerful way of shaping an LLM’s response. Plenty of prompts start by telling Claude something like, “You are ________, the world’s leading expert in ___________.” You could ask ChatGPT: “Rewrite this essay in a spare, understated style using clear, direct language and short sentences, favoring simple vocabulary over ornate phrasing, emphasizing concrete details and action over explanation, avoiding abstraction and sentimentality, and conveying emotional depth indirectly through precise, unadorned prose.” Or you could just type “Rewrite this like Ernest Hemingway” and save some keystrokes.1

    But does that LLM’s response mean the Hemingway estate is now owed money? And does Grammarly saying “This suggestion is inspired by Joshua Benton’s ‘Nieman Journalism Lab analyses'” mean Mehrotra owes me a steak dinner?

    Check out the full Decoder episode to hear their vigorous back-and-forth over how, as Patel puts it, “people don’t understand the difference between copyrights and trademarks and names and likeness,” and that “AI is collapsing those differences faster than ever before.”"

    niemanlab.org/2026/03/grammarl

    #AI #GenerativeAI #LLMs #SuperHuman #Grammarly #Copyright #IP

  10. "It’s true that citing the names of specific people can be a powerful way of shaping an LLM’s response. Plenty of prompts start by telling Claude something like, “You are ________, the world’s leading expert in ___________.” You could ask ChatGPT: “Rewrite this essay in a spare, understated style using clear, direct language and short sentences, favoring simple vocabulary over ornate phrasing, emphasizing concrete details and action over explanation, avoiding abstraction and sentimentality, and conveying emotional depth indirectly through precise, unadorned prose.” Or you could just type “Rewrite this like Ernest Hemingway” and save some keystrokes.1

    But does that LLM’s response mean the Hemingway estate is now owed money? And does Grammarly saying “This suggestion is inspired by Joshua Benton’s ‘Nieman Journalism Lab analyses'” mean Mehrotra owes me a steak dinner?

    Check out the full Decoder episode to hear their vigorous back-and-forth over how, as Patel puts it, “people don’t understand the difference between copyrights and trademarks and names and likeness,” and that “AI is collapsing those differences faster than ever before.”"

    niemanlab.org/2026/03/grammarl

    #AI #GenerativeAI #LLMs #SuperHuman #Grammarly #Copyright #IP

  11. @reckless1280, editor-in-chief of @theverge, was one of the people whose name was used without permission in Grammarly's short-lived "Expert Review" feature. He talked to Shishir Mehrotra, CEO of Grammarly's parent company Superhuman, about what happened.

    flip.it/WlgMcb

    #Grammarly #AI #ArtificialIntelligence #Technology #Tech

  12. The Atlantic's Kaitlyn Tiffany explores Grammarly's controversial "Expert Review" feature, before it was shut down. She attempts to discover what it would be like to be edited by herself, what tweaks other famous writers would perhaps suggest and whether the creative writing industry should be concerned about being replaced.

    flip.it/oYxaBP

    #Grammarly #AI #TechNews #Writing

  13. Featured experts were outraged their likenesses were used without their consent. Others were specifically annoyed at the “anodyne” advice the borrowed identities were dishing out. Angwin, for one, told Wired she reviewed some of the suggestions only to be surprised “at how bad [the advice] was.”

    niemanlab.org/2026/03/journali

    #ai #aislop #Grammarly #writing #journalism

  14. Grammarly removes AI Expert Review feature mimicking writers after backlash
    theguardian.com/books/2026/mar

    A few days ago, I tested the Expert Review gadget by Grammarly. I asked it to generate a review of Expert Review and give impressions of Grammarly in the style of @BinChicken. It paused for a moment as though in thought, and then returned: "Get in the bin!"

    Grammarly has been making software for around 15 years, primarily tools for spell-checking and grammar-checking. Grammarly used to have a pretty good reputation. Like so many other Tech companies lately, Grammarly has jumped on the bandwagon of stuffing AI into everything. The AI bubble is bursting because nobody is happy to discover they're on the receiving-end of Enshittification.

    Expert Review works by stealing the life's work of experts (living and dead), using it to train a chat-bot, making marketing claims that the chat-bot is "Intelligent", and then selling the output to unwitting customers.

    The experts saw this as a scientifically fraudulent misrepresentation of their academic work, a rip-off, and morally repugnant. Moreover, it's dishonest to customers because what the chat-bot produces is not a quote of what those experts said. It's made-up text, cobbled-together in the style of the experts, which is presented in a way that customers may be led to believe is an actual quote from the experts. This fiction (to put it politely) has no place in science, research, or education.

    #Grammarly #AI #GenAI #GenerativeAI #ExpertReview #Enshittification #AIBubble

  15. A writer is suing Grammarly for turning her and other authors into ‘AI editors’ without consent

    Grammarly released a controversial feature last week that uses AI to simulate editorial feedback, making it seem like…
    #NewsBeep #News #Business #GB #grammarly #lawsuits #superhuman #UK #UnitedKingdom
    newsbeep.com/uk/472813/

  16. "You should all be ashamed.

    You should be ashamed of where you work. Not just Grammarly or Superhuman or whatever comically dumb name you come up with next. Almost everyone running tech firms, most people in positions of responsibility, pretty much every C-suite type — congrats, you’re all making the world a worse place."

    moryan.com/an-open-letter-to-g

    #AI #ArtificialIntelligence #Grammarly #slop

  17. Grammarly faces a class action lawsuit over its "Expert Review" AI feature, which allegedly used the names of journalists and authors like Stephen King without their consent. The feature was pulled the same day the lawsuit was filed. gizmodo.com/grammarly-allegedl #AIagent #AI #GenAI #AIEthics #Grammarly

  18. Grammarly Is Pulling Down Its Explosively Controversial Feature That Impersonates Writers Without Their Permissions

    futurism.com/artificial-intell

    #ai #grammarly

  19. @TomF @evacide

    According to that WIRED article, #Grammarly has already axed their "Expert Review":

    "The complaint comes as Superhuman has already decided to discontinue the feature amid significant public backlash."

    wired.com/story/grammarly-is-f

    #ai

  20. “There’s not a single word about ‘permission’ in that statement, and no sign that Grammarly is walking back the idea. It sounds like the company fully intends to keep pretending real human beings are behind its edits, just with ‘greater control’.”

    theverge.com/tech/891822/gramm

    #Grammarly #Writing #SpellCheck #AI

  21. 🚨 BREAKING: #Grammarly, the digital red pen, is apparently moonlighting as the identity thief none of us wanted. 😱 Yet, we're still surprised when the service that reads our every typo steals more than just our misplaced commas. 😂 #WhoKnew
    theverge.com/ai-artificial-int #IdentityTheft #DigitalPrivacy #Typos #SecurityBreach #WhoKnew #HackerNews #ngated