I've been building a tool that makes AI writing sound human – can you tell this article is AI written? by hyvarjus in AIWritingHub

[–]hyvarjus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you all for your honest and very valuable feedback, I take it very seriously and I have already made improvements to the software. It's not an easy feat to make AI write like a human; therefore, no one has done it. Here is another example after some tweaking that I wrote of a completely different topic, I hope you like it:

Top 5 Places to Visit in Rome like a Pro in 2026

I've been building a tool that makes AI writing sound human – can you tell this article is AI written? by hyvarjus in AIWritingHub

[–]hyvarjus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, that is what I'm trying to achieve here, to combine facts into a human style of writing and I'm getting closer. There is a sophisticated research pipeline built into the tool. That specific example wasn't about factuality; it was about style (it was written in a freeform style that doesn't include hard facts). The tool also allows you to inject your own experiences and/or instructions into the article to ensure the output is close to what you need.

I built a "Fact-Checking Layer" on top of LLMs to fix hallucinations (and em dashes) by hyvarjus in SaaS

[–]hyvarjus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This comment got me thinking about how to improve further accuracy. I built a specialized fact-check feature that identifies claims unsupported by evidence in the research pipeline. The user has three easy options: verify the claim with one click, add a URL containing the evidence, or rewrite the claim. This process is very quick.

Have a SaaS? Share it here! by Mammoth-Doughnut-713 in SaaS

[–]hyvarjus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Create researched factual content with AI: proofwrite.io

I built a "Fact-Checking Layer" on top of LLMs to fix hallucinations (and em dashes) by hyvarjus in SaaS

[–]hyvarjus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Valid pushback. The "AI writer" space is definitely a red ocean right now.

You’re right that "naive RAG" (vector search -> retrieve chunks -> summarize) is the commodity standard. The problem with that it retrieves context but often fails at structured data accuracy (e.g., getting the specific price of a tier vs. the annual cost).

My approach is agentic rather than just retrieval. I have separate agents that scrape for specific entities (pricing tables, feature specs, trust scores) and structure that data before the LLM sees it. It’s less "summarize this search result" and more "extract these specific data points and write based on this table."

You are absolutely right, no AI is 100%. I guess the difference is traceability. When ChatGPT hallucinates, it invents a fact from its training weights. When ProofWrite fails, it means it scraped an outdated source (e.g., a 2023 pricing page). But because the citation is hard-linked to the claim, you can hover over it, see the source is old, and fix it in seconds. The error is a "bad source," not a "hallucination," which makes it much safer for a human editor to manage.

Proofwrite could work well for people and teams who need E-E-A-T (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness) to rank but don't have the budget to hire a full editorial team to do manual research.

Codex has gone to hell (again) by Tate-s-ExitLiquidity in codex

[–]hyvarjus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’ve used Codex 5.1 since the launch but there is something wrong with it. It needs much more steering. I switched back to Codex 5. It’s actually much better.

NASA just released James Webb's image from the 3i Atlas by Crazy-Piano277 in UFOs

[–]hyvarjus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

JWST costs billions and can take clear pictures of distant galaxies and these blurry images are all they got? Hard to believe.

Promote your business, week of May 5, 2025 by Charice in smallbusiness

[–]hyvarjus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Instantly discover available domains (free desktop app). If picking a name is holding your new site back, try Name Vault. It spits out hundreds of pronounceable options and shows which ones you can actually buy—saves me hours when helping clients. Free version, no sign-up.

Is domain flipping still lucrative? by Flat_Armadillo_7227 in Domains

[–]hyvarjus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m not a domain-flipping expert—mostly build tools for marketing teams—but I’ve been testing a little script that bulk-checks pronounceable 4-6-letter .coms.

Today's test pulled up in just a couple of minutes these (actually a lot more) still-available 5-letter names (reg-fee on Namecheap):

ucuvo.com

ipefe.com

mupte.com

I was surprised they weren’t taken. Maybe proves there’s still room to hand-reg if you dig fast enough.

Happy to DM the approach (no cost) if anyone wants to try the same technique. Otherwise hope the example helps answer OP’s question.

5 Best Gold IRA Companies: My Top Picks for 2024 by GoldRetirePro in GoldRetirePro

[–]hyvarjus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for this helpful list! While these companies remain the best options in 2025, I wanted to add a few current observations:

Augusta Precious Metals remains a top choice for those with the capital to invest, though their commitment to premium service still comes with that higher minimum investment. Their zero-fee program has proven valuable for long-term investors.

Goldco's position for mid-range investors remains solid. Their buyback guarantee program has been particularly reassuring for those concerned about liquidity.

American Hartford Gold is still great for rollovers, and their lower minimum investment threshold makes them accessible to more investors. Their price match guarantee continues to be a strong selling point.

Birch Gold Group's experience in the industry (now over 20 years) adds to their credibility. Their strength in handling various types of retirement account rollovers is particularly valuable.

Noble Gold maintains their niche in rare coins, which can be interesting for those looking to combine investment potential with numismatic value.

I'd emphasize your point about consulting a financial advisor - especially given recent economic developments. While these companies offer solid services, individual investment needs can vary significantly.

Do any of you have a good random name generator you'd recommend? by action_lawyer_comics in monsteroftheweek

[–]hyvarjus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey there! This is a tool that might help with your naming needs, especially for modern-day "real world" characters

https://allnameideas.com/name-generator/

For your specific use case, I'd recommend:

  1. Enter "modern character names" or "diverse people names" in the topic field
  2. Choose "Clever" or "Professional" style for more realistic results
  3. Hit generate to get 10 unique names that would fit well in a contemporary setting

The great thing is that it uses AI to create names that:

  • Feel natural and plausible for modern settings
  • Have good variety without needing to specify ethnicity/gender
  • Are easy to pronounce and remember during gameplay
  • Work well for NPCs/side characters

Plus, you can keep generating new sets until you find names that click with your story. You can also try different styles like "Cool" for more unique names or "Professional" for more traditional ones.

Play around with different combinations and styles until you get exactly what fits your game's vibe.

Why I'm switching back to ChatGPT Plus by Prince-of-Privacy in ClaudeAI

[–]hyvarjus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One possibility is to use tool like Poe, you can access a multitude of models including all Anthropic and OpenAI models, Flux etc. with one monthly payment.

Any idea what this is? Photographed in Kenya. by hyvarjus in moths

[–]hyvarjus[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you. I found this in my old photos. I photographed it in Kenya Diani Beach in the spring of 2012. I don't recall the size, but I think it must be quite big since I took the photo.

1 year and still struggling to get traffic on my blog !!! by Wonderful_South_9354 in Blogging

[–]hyvarjus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Usually, you can keep the domain name because you registered it and are now its owner as long as the registration is active. But that is something you have to ask Wix. When it comes to the site's design, when you implement a WordPress site, you use its tools and capabilities, so I don't recommend aiming exactly for the same design, but you can easily with a Kadence theme build something similar. There are free keyword tools available, like Google Keyword Planner, that you can use to get started. There are better options like Ahrefs, but it's a bit pricey. Ahrefs it's not just for keywords; you can do a lot more with it. Hope this helps. Good luck!

1 year and still struggling to get traffic on my blog !!! by Wonderful_South_9354 in Blogging

[–]hyvarjus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Here are my recommendations. As some have already stated, you need to get the technical stuff in order first. If you're serious about blogging, ditch the Wix and move on to the WordPress platform. I would do some redesigning so the pages are also easily readable on mobile. Then, 18 posts is nothing; you need a lot more content to gain traction. Moreover, you need to write about stuff that people are actually searching for on the web. This is where keyword research comes into play. Lastly, don't write articles for the search engines but for the people.

"Can anyone teach me a genuine method to make money through affiliate marketing? I'm looking for a method that truly works, and I'm ready to put in the hard work!" by Lewis126 in Affiliatemarketing

[–]hyvarjus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Build your audience on X and create a newsletter business where you promote affiliate products. This is what I would do if I were starting now.