Does the AI make mistakes?
Yes. The AI that writes your book is good at synthesizing and explaining ideas, but like every AI writing tool it can make confident-sounding mistakes, and it helps to know what those look like before you read.
Made-up references. The AI can invent quotes, citations, book titles, or author names that sound plausible but don't exist. If you plan to cite something from your book externally, verify it against a primary source first.
Phantom charts and diagrams. TailoredRead books are text-only, but the AI text will occasionally describe a chart, diagram, or figure as if it were printed on the page ("see Figure 1"). No image is ever added — that's the AI forgetting its own format, not a missing upload.
Outdated information. The model has a training-data cutoff, so very recent events, products, or research may be missing, wrong, or frozen at an earlier state.
Numbers that don't quite add up. Statistics, percentages, and specific figures can look precise while being approximate or invented. Double-check any number you plan to cite.
Inconsistencies across a long book. Over hundreds of pages, the AI can contradict an earlier point, reuse a term in a new way, or state a figure slightly differently in two chapters.
TailoredRead upgrades to the newest AI models as they're released, and we keep tuning how your book is planned and written. Each new model makes fewer of these mistakes, knows about more recent events, and handles nuance better than the one before.