Claude-style writing can make normal messages feel suspicious
Claude-like writing s can make ordinary messages hard to trust at face value. A heartfelt birthday note may start to look artificial when it has three bullet points, an em dash, or the familiar “not just X, but Y” rhythm.
A neat closing line that wraps up can also feel like an AI clue. Words such as “delve” can stand out when they appear in messages from people who would not normally use them.
The hard part is that many real people may naturally write this way too. Once these s become familiar, posts and l messages can feel harder to read without checking for AI traces.
Key points
- Claude-like structure can make even l messages feel AI-written.
- Common tells include bullet-point structure, an em dash, and the “not just X, but Y” rhythm.
- Unusual words such as “delve” can feel suspicious when they do not match the sender’s normal voice.
- Real people can also write in these s, so by style alone is unreliable.
- Makers using AI for launch notes, emails, or social posts should preserve a natural voice.