Guide

Will people know you used AI to write your posts?

By the Kraflio team (Menixuz IT Solutions) · Updated July 2026

What people actually notice isn't "AI" — it's generic, could-be-anyone writing. Kraflio writes from your voice, not a generic model, so your posts read like you. You're always the author: you review and edit every post, and nothing goes out that you didn't approve. Auto-posting only publishes the posts you've already okayed, on your schedule — it never decides what to say for you. A post written in your voice that you approved is simply your post.

One thing we won't do: no honest tool can promise a post is "undetectable," and we won't pretend otherwise. This page is about the mechanics that make the question stop mattering — your voice, your edits, your approval.

What people actually notice

Readers don't run detectors on your posts — they notice when writing could have come from anyone. The tells of generic AI writing are sameness: interchangeable openers, templated structure, a voice that belongs to the model instead of the person. A voice-matched tool removes the tell at the source: it writes through a fingerprint of how you actually write — your sentence rhythm, vocabulary, hooks, and sign-offs — and scores every draft for how closely it matches you before you see it. That's why the practical answer to "will people know?" is a mechanism, not a promise.

You approve every post — the tool never speaks for you

Nothing publishes that you didn't approve. Every draft is scored — authenticity (reads human, not templated), voice-match (sounds like you), and factual integrity (drafts that invent facts get flagged and rewritten) — then you review it, edit anything that isn't quite you, and only then does it go out. Auto-posting is a schedule for posts you already approved, not a machine deciding what to say in your name. That's what makes the post yours: your voice in, your judgment on, your name under it.

What LinkedIn actually says about AI-assisted content

LinkedIn publishes its own guidance, and it doesn't ban AI writing. Its "Best practices for content created with the help of AI" asks you to review and edit AI-assisted content, stay responsible for what you publish, and consider disclosing when AI played a significant role. Its June 2026 update, "Keeping conversations real", adds that content which "appears to be generated by AI and lacks clear perspective" travels less far beyond your network. That's the workflow Kraflio enforces by design: your voice, fact-flagging before you see a draft, and your approval before anything publishes.

Common questions

Will people know I used AI to write my posts?

What people notice isn't "AI" — it's generic, could-be-anyone writing. Kraflio writes from your voice, not a generic model, so your posts read like you, and you review and approve every one before it goes out. No honest tool can promise a post is "undetectable," and we won't pretend otherwise — but a post written in your voice that you approved is simply your post.

Is it okay to use AI to write my posts?

Yes. Drafting faster with a tool is no different from spellcheck, an outline, or a ghostwriter — as long as the ideas and the final words are yours. With Kraflio they are: it drafts in your voice, and you edit and approve every post before it publishes. You're using AI to sound more like yourself, not less.

Will LinkedIn's algorithm penalize AI posts?

There's no public evidence LinkedIn penalizes AI-assisted posts as a category. What loses reach, by LinkedIn's own June 2026 guidance, is content that looks AI-generated and lacks a clear point of view — it travels less far beyond your network. Writing in your own voice, adding your own take, and editing before you post is exactly what avoids that.

What if I copy someone's style into AI — isn't that plagiarism?

Kraflio learns from your posts, not anyone else's — your voice profile is built only from samples you own and provide. It writes new posts from your voice and your ideas, and checks every draft for made-up facts. It's built to produce your content, not a copy of someone else's.

How do I know it writes original posts, not recycled ones?

Every Kraflio post is scored before you ever see it — for authenticity (reads like a person, not a template), voice-match (sounds like you), and factual integrity (it flags and won't pass drafts that invent facts). Anything scoring too low is rewritten automatically. You're not trusting a black box that generates and hopes — you see the result and edit it before it posts.

How much should be AI vs my own words?

There's no magic ratio, and anyone who quotes you one is guessing. Kraflio drafts in your voice, so most of it already sounds like you; then you change whatever isn't quite right before it goes out. Some barely touch a draft, others rewrite a line or two — either way you're the author, and you approve it.

Want the mechanics of the voice side? Read how to make AI write posts that sound like you. Comparing tools? See the transparent buyer's guide to AI tools for LinkedIn content or browse all comparisons.