Our life has become so dumb in certain ways. There are people who invested heavily in learning their mother or a foreign language, its spelling, grammar, syntax and idiosyncrasies, like when to use an em-dash, an Oxford comma, a semicolon, an ellipsis -- these smart educated people now seriously deliberate whether using wrong dashes and adding a spelling mistake or two would be a good way to prove you are a human (I think we never should have allowed the framing of CAPTCHA to be "prove you are not a robot", it was demeaning back then and still is now, it's just that the alternatives were not and still aren't clear-cut). The same things that would have made you fail a written essay in school are somehow becoming a requirement, but not in "haX0r" or online communities where "writing funny" has always been a differentiating factor, but for absolutely everybody who has to communicate with others in written form.
It's of course not a surprise that an LLM would be most proficient in language use and, adjacent to that, in proper formatting of said language. But it's a good thing and a good tool for writing, as anyone who has ever used a classic spell or grammar checker will attest to. But apparently we as a society have once again managed to completely overlook and demonise the good and now people who have paid attention in school have to bow to people who are somehow convinced that perfect spelling is a sign that someone cheated. This is not LLMs' fault, it's people's who think they've understood something when they really haven't, crying heresy over others doing things the correct way.
That being said: of course there are social and technological challenges with cheating, spam bots and sock puppets and what not, but the phenomenon itself is not really new, just the scale, cost and quality is way different now. We need to find a balanced way to approach it -- trying to weed out every last possible AI cheater while hurting real innocent people in the process is not worth it. Especially since we don't have a proper metric to actually prove who's a cheater and who is not, it's gotten way harder since the days of "As a large language model" being in every second sentence.
I felt it quite a while back (more than 10 years ago), when, in high school, I learnt LaTeX and discovered Beamer. I naturally proceeded to make all of my presentations with it, including the rehearsal for a big competitive French exam. The person reviewing the presentation advised me to dirty it up a bit, otherwise nobody would believe that my father wasn’t a PhD researcher that did the work for me.
That was a bit saddening honestly. I kept the presentation as-is as I didn’t knew how to willfully screw up a Beamer presentation, and I would not touch PowerPoint (fortunately the final jury believed me).
Cheating had always been an issue before LLMs, but now we’re back to the same old tricks: just make sure to add a mistake or two to hide you copied the homework on your neighbor. It’s a shame because I kinda like learning the subtleties of foreign languages, and as a non-native English speaker, it’s quite rewarding when going online!