I've never really used Google docs. We used it at school. Everyone's iPads were linked to it and I used it that way, but never just for me. I stick with Word because that's what I've always used. I have never used AI for anything. I did notice that when I post onto AO3, occasionally if I stay on a button too long or hit the wrong one with my sausage fingers, sometimes a prompt will come up saying let chatGPT fix this for you. No thanks! One day Mersey and I were playing around with the chat feature. More her then me. We were talking about how some of the writing on sites like reddit seem like the stories are all generically written so I was giving her prompts, and she was putting them into the AI and then short stories were coming up. LOL Like you said, it was accurate when it came to summarizing but it was also flat and definitely made by computer. I'm just glad that as a teacher, I don't have to deal with that. Do you have kids trying to use AI to pass off as their own? I would think 4th grade is still young to try that crap, but you never know.
Google Docs is a decent Word substitute. I like that it saves automatically and is accessible from anywhere, so I no longer have to worry about saving docs to flash drives to move between my desktop and laptop. The biggest downside I've encountered is that it has a word count limit. My super long stories literally won't fit in one document on Google LOL. But I don't even have Word anymore, so it's either that or Open Office.
Thankfully, my 4th graders are too young try using AI. The most they do is plagiarize by copy/pasting directly from the internet, which is painfully obvious. But I feel for teachers of older students. I think it would be hard to detect and even harder to prove, since you can input the same prompt and get a different result each time.
The toolbar keeps popping up each time I open my story, so this time, I let it come up with a list of suggestions. One of the suggestions was: "The sentence beginning with "The tiny bra top showed plenty of cleavage..." could be rephrased to be less sexually suggestive." Considering that sentence was in a sex scene, I'd say being sexually suggestive was the point LOL. It also finds my use of medical terminology in a hospital scene "vulgar" and thinks some of my sentences are too wordy. The last part is probably true, but otherwise, I'll take its advice with a grain of salt.