AI Disclosure
Sphere uses AI tools throughout its writing, research, and design work. We think being explicit about which parts were produced which way matters — both because Sphere’s pitch leans on epistemic credibility, and because readers deserve to know what they’re reading.
The four-tier scheme
Section titled “The four-tier scheme”Every page on this site (and on the Sphere docs site) carries a label at the bottom that falls into one of four tiers:
✍️ Authored
Section titled “✍️ Authored”Written by a named human from scratch. AI may have been used as a spell-checker, search tool, or thought partner — but the substantive prose is human work.
🧑🔧 AI-assisted
Section titled “🧑🔧 AI-assisted”A substantive collaboration between a human and an AI model. Either party may have started the draft — the human may have written prose that AI helped revise, restructure, or fact-check, or AI may have drafted prose that a human substantially rewrote. The defining characteristic is that both shaped the final text materially.
⚙️ AI-drafted
Section titled “⚙️ AI-drafted”A draft from an AI model that a human reviewed and approved without substantial rewrites. Acceptable for low-risk content (summaries, glossary entries) but not for foundational claims.
🤖 AI-generated
Section titled “🤖 AI-generated”Produced by an AI model with no substantive human review yet. We use this tier for automated research outputs — surveys of related work, literature reviews, comparison studies. Treat these as raw material: useful, traceable, but not endorsed claims.
Per-section overrides
Section titled “Per-section overrides”A page may carry one default label but include a section that’s labeled differently. When that happens, you’ll see a smaller inline note at the top of that section.
What’s recorded
Section titled “What’s recorded”For every labeled page, where applicable, the footer also records:
- Model — which AI model produced the draft (e.g.
claude-opus-4-7) - Drafted — when the AI draft was produced
- Edited by — the human who edited it
- Edited — when the human edit happened
This data is also embedded as <meta> tags and schema.org/CreativeWork
JSON-LD, so any reader, archive, or aggregator can extract it without
having to scrape the visible footer.
What this scheme does not claim
Section titled “What this scheme does not claim”- It does not measure quality. An authored page can still be wrong; a generated page can still be useful.
- It does not track edit-by-edit provenance. If you want commit-level history, the underlying repository is the source of truth.
- It does not distinguish between AI tools used as research aids (search, summarization, suggestion) during human authoring versus AI models used as primary drafters. Tier authored covers both — the distinction is whether the prose came out of the model or out of the human.
Why we bother
Section titled “Why we bother”Sphere is a project about making collective epistemics legible. Hiding the provenance of our own writing while we propose tools to make everyone else’s writing traceable would be incoherent. So we label.