Wikipedia has a cheat sheet of well-known tells for identifying generated text. (With an appropriate warning not to over-index on minor ones as absolute proof) https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_AI_Cleanup/AI_catchphrases
Wikipedia:WikiProject AI Cleanup/AI catchphrases - Wikipedia

@0xabad1dea #TIL that I'm just an LLM bot   

I'm using some Russian #typography rules which differs from the same English rules and, sadly  , the LLMs tends to use same rules when they comes to the dashes.

In RU typography en-dash used to divide numbers and it doesn't have spaces on the left and right. Like this: 123–456–789.

And the em-dash used to divide parts of sentence and it should have space on the left and right — like this 

@evgandr
@0xabad1dea Well… it is on the English Wikipedia referring to English text 😉

But on RU keyboards, you use the same Unicode codepoints, right? So U+002D for everything, right?

@tajpulo @0xabad1dea Yep, it was just funny to treat myself like a bot 🤖 beep-boop🙂. And also I wanted to write a bit about ru-typography

> you use the same Unicode codepoints

Yes, most of the people just use the same codepoint (-). But for people who want to use the typography symbols properly there are a Birman's layout (https://ilyabirman.net/typography-layout/) or Compose key in the X-server-based systems

Typography Layout

Typography Keyboard Layout

@evgandr
@0xabad1dea Ah, interesting. Thank you for sharing ☺️