When I was a student in a Master of Taxation program, Spring Semester 2019, Our professor for Federal Tax Procedure (now the Director of the IRS Office of Professional Responsibility) advised us to run everything we wrote for the class through both Wordrake and Grammarly, as did the law firm where she practiced. Her point was we must pack our IRS correspondence into as few words as possible.
Since then, I've continued using Grammarly to correct spelling and grammar errors (primarily for curbing my use of passive voice). That was four years before Grammarly started using AI; now Grammarly is more aggressive, more of a Type AI personality.
When I was a student in a Master of Taxation program, Spring Semester 2019, Our professor for Federal Tax Procedure (now the Director of the IRS Office of Professional Responsibility) advised us to run everything we wrote for the class through both Wordrake and Grammarly, as did the law firm where she practiced. Her point was we must pack our IRS correspondence into as few words as possible.
Since then, I've continued using Grammarly to correct spelling and grammar errors (primarily for curbing my use of passive voice). That was four years before Grammarly started using AI; now Grammarly is more aggressive, more of a Type AI personality.