Tuesday, May 26, 2026

They Won a Prestigious Writing Prize. Then These Key Giveaways Sparked Allegations of AI

A London-based literary competition is facing major scrutiny after three of five winners have been accused of using AI—partly or wholly—to write their prize-winning stories. The 2026 Commonwealth Short Story Prize selected one winner each from five regions that span Africa, Asia, Canada and Europe, the Caribbean, and the Pacific. Following publication of the winning entries in literary magazine Granta, online sleuths called foul. The Caribbean regional winner, Jamir Nazir, was praised for the “lyrical precision and haunting atmosphere” of his short story “The Serpent in the Grove,” as well as “the confidence and restraint of its voice,” according to a post on social media platform X by Commonwealth Foundation Creatives. But internet denizens allege that the very same voice that won the prize may not be human at all. Nabeel S. Qureshi, an AI marketing entrepreneur and a former visiting scholar at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, flagged certain signs he said were AI tells such as “‘Not X, not Y, but Z’ sentences,” as well as the use of the word “‘hum,'” in a post on X. He concluded by writing: “A major milestone for AI, at any rate …” Following the allegations, Wired ran the text of “The Serpent in the Grove” through AI detection tool Pangram, which the publication notes has consistently outperformed other similar tools. It determined that the text was 100 percent AI-generated. It’s worth noting that no AI-detection tools are totally accurate. “The Serpent in the Grove” isn’t the only story under scrutiny. Pangram determined that “The Bastion’s Shadow” by John Edward DeMicoli, the winner from Malta, was also fully AI-generated and that “Mehendi Nights” by Sharon Aruparayil, the winner from India, was partially written using AI. Holly Ann Miller’s “Second Skin,” and Lisa-Anne Julien’s “Me and Ma’am,” however, were ruled “fully human-written” by Pangram, according to Wired. The regional winners were chosen from 7,806 entries, which the Commonwealth Foundation noted on its site is the “second highest number in the Prize’s history.” A final winner from among the five will be announced on June 30. Following the allegations, the Commonwealth Foundation released a statement on its website, acknowledging the challenges generative AI poses to literary and creative work. The statement also noted that the foundation’s judging process is robust, but judges do not currently use AI checkers in any stage. “We are aware of allegations and discussion regarding generative AI and our Short Story Prize. We take these claims seriously and are committed to responding to them with care and transparency,” the statement reads. “When they submit stories to the Prize, writers accept our entry rules and guidelines. These include confirming that their submission is their own original work. All shortlisted writers have personally stated that no AI was used and, upon further consultation, the Foundation has confirmed this.” The foundation also noted that until a reliable tool emerges with which the organization can screen unpublished work for AI, the prize competition “must operate on the principle of trust.” As always, Redditers had much to say about the subject, some assuming AI guilt, others questioning the accuracy of the AI checking tools, and many picking at the quality of the stories more broadly. “This…doesn’t surprise me given the state of contemporary literary prose. It honestly just reads like bog-standard ‘MFA voice,’” one Redditor wrote of Nazir’s story. A recent report from digital marketing agency Graphite found that since the debut of ChatGPT in 2022, there has been a meteoric rise of AI-generated content on the internet. The number of articles written by AI now equals that of human-written content, although the overall share seems to have plateaued. Axios reported at the time that the quality of AI-generated writing has meaningfully improved, not to mention that it can be difficult to determine what constitutes AI writing. Whereas some content is mostly or entirely AI-generated, some writers use AI tools throughout the process of drafting and editing. BY CHLOE AIELLO @CHLOBO_ILO

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