Get early access
Diglot is a writing tool that defends real writers from AI-detection bias. Built for ESL students, grad students, and professionals whose careful, formal English looks like AI to detectors. We're opening beta in waves — be first in line.
You're in.
We'll email when beta opens. Meanwhile, here's the 5-step Flagxiety Defense framework — the same process the Palo Alto family used to mount their 1,162-page defense:
- Keep keystroke-level draft history (Google Docs version history is free).
- Save digital timestamps mapping the writing process.
- Vary sentence rhythm during revision (mix short + long).
- Run a plagiarism check before submission (verifiable, unlike AI detectors).
- For high-stakes work, log the writing process itself.
Something went wrong. Please try again, or email us directly.
Why this exists
- Doe v. PAUSD (May 2026) — a California family submitted 1,162 pages of evidence to defend their daughter from a Turnitin 76% AI flag. School district rejected it. Now in federal court.
- Newby v. Adelphi (Jan 2026) — NY judge ruled the university's AI-detection decision was «devoid of reason». Sanctions rescinded. Landmark.
- Stanford research (2023) — GPT detectors flagged over half of essays by non-native English speakers as AI-generated. Native essays — far lower flag rate.