Detection Tool Claims That the Pope’s AI Warnings Were Created by AI

On Monday, a newly created Reddit account surfaced on the popular forum r/AmItheAsshole, a place where users seek judgment from strangers on personal issues. This user inquired whether they had overstepped by ārefusing to babysit my stepmotherās kids because I have my own job and responsibilities.ā The post was clear, concise, and grammatically sound, detailing a scenario where the personās stepmother and father frequently expected them to provide childcare with little notice, resulting in an argument.
āNow thereās tension at home, and Iām starting to wonder if I handled it incorrectly,ā the redditor ended. āI know that raising kids can be stressful, but I also feel I shouldnāt be obligated to take on that responsibility when itās not my role.ā Responses to this user were mostly supportive: many noted that the kids were not theirs to care for, and suggested that moving out would be the best choice.
However, AI detection software created by Pangram Labsāwhich claims to have a 99.98 percent accuracy rate and a mere one in 10,000 false positive rateāidentified the original story of family conflict as AI-generated.
I saw it marked as AI content while browsing the page thanks to the new version of Pangramās Chrome extension, launching to the public this week; at the $20 per month paid tier, the tool analyzes posts on social platforms like Reddit, X, LinkedIn, Medium, and Substack in real-time, categorizing them as human-written, AI-generated, or AI-assisted. The evaluation also provides a confidence level from Pangram: low, medium, or high.
Researchers have discovered AI-generated content proliferating online. It threatens the integrity of journalism and social networks alike. Text partially produced by AI constitutes over a third of all new websites as of 2025, as per a recent study from Stanford University, Imperial College of London, and the Internet Archive. (The researchers employed earlier Pangram tools to reach their conclusions.)
Itās this clutter that Max Spero, CEO of Pangram and a self-described āslop janitor,ā aims to help eliminate. He informs WIRED that incorporating instant analysis into the companyās browser extension provides users an easier means to check for AI content across the websites they regularly visit.
āBy offering proactive checks, it becomes significantly more useful for individuals who want to avoid seeing slop,ā Spero explains. āCopying and pasting text into an external tool is a major hurdle. People simply wonāt do it.ā
Naturally, fabricated scenarios are not unusual in subreddits like r/AmItheAsshole, where trolls occasionally post engagement bait featuring outrageously absurd tales. Yet even a discerning reader may not suspect a relatively ordinary narrative like the one above could be fabricated. (The redditor who initiated the post did not respond to a request for clarification on whether they utilized AI or what they intended to achieve with the contribution, which they later removed.)
While no AI detection system is infallible, Pangramās is considered the most reliable and accurate among third-party researchers at various universities; a 2025 University of Chicago study evaluating AI detection tools awarded Pangram its highest rating and observed that its false positive rate is nearly nonexistent, particularly on longer texts. Spero notes that one factor contributing to its superior performance is that itās trained partly on āmore challenging examples that lie closer to the dividing line between AI and human.ā I was unable to cause it to generate a false positive when testing it on articles published in WIRED.
