Humanly is your configurable and traceable
Human-AI collaborative writing platform
Every piece of writing has a story. Now you can prove it.
Drafting with attention
The first thing to notice about a draft is the pause before it. Before a sentence lands on the page there is a small, deliberate refusal, the writer choosing not to type yet.
Most drafts fail in this earlier moment, when the mind accepts whatever language arrives first. The discipline is to wait, then to choose.
I found support in the attached PDF: the source frames attention as revision discipline, which supports your point about waiting before drafting…
Most drafts fail when the mind accepts whatever language arrives takes what arrives.
Did you write this, or did AI?
AI detectors estimate authenticity from the finished text. Humanly records the writing process directly, showing how the text was composed from typing, paste, and AI assistance.
How does Humanly work?
Configure a writing environment, draft under the policy, record the activity log, and generate a signed certificate.
Common Q&A
Why is final text not enough?
A final document cannot show whether it came from human typing, AI generation, or mixed human-AI writing. Humanly records the writing process itself.
What does Humanly record?
Humanly records in-platform writing activity, including text edits, clipboard actions, workspace status, and AI assistance, then turns them into logs and replay.
Who controls the writing rules?
The owner configures the writing environment before drafting starts, including AI access, copy-paste rules, resources, timing, length bounds, and detectors.
What does a certificate show?
A certificate packages authorship statistics, environment settings, activity log, replay, anomaly behavior review, and signature verification.
How does Humanly help prevent cheating?
Humanly uses two-layer anomaly detection: statistic-based anomaly patterns and model-based human typing detection. These signals surface suspicious behavior for review, rather than making an automatic verdict.
