Drip-write your finished draft into Docs, paced over time.
Google Docs batches edits and timestamps each one. A pasted draft shows up as one giant insertion at a single timestamp — that's the tell. AutoTyper writes the same text as small chunks paced across the window you picked, so version history reads like someone actually working through a paper.
✓ Day Pass · ✓ Pro
Real writers don't type at constant speed. Pro mirrors that: small natural pieces of text land with random pauses and variable rhythm, with the occasional long pause when a real writer would step away. Realistic edits drop in at the tail of each piece — a typo, a backspace, a fix. After the main draft, one more revision pass arrives a few minutes later, like reading your work over.
✓ Pro only
A 1,500-word draft typed in three minutes still looks suspicious — even with the right pacing pattern. AutoTyper enforces minimum durations that match a real writing pace, so the timeline reads like a session, not a dump.
AutoTyper is a web-based tool that drip-writes a finished draft into Google Docs, paced across a window you choose — anywhere from 10 minutes to a week. Paste your text, connect a Google Doc, and AutoTyper writes it in small paced chunks with natural intervals, so what gets saved to version history looks like ordinary typing instead of a single paste event.
Yes, easily. Anyone with edit access can open File → Version history and see a single insertion event with thousands of characters at one timestamp. AutoTyper avoids this by spreading the same content across many small insertions paced through your chosen window, so the timeline looks like ordinary writing instead of a paste event.
You can't, really. Google Docs lets you rename versions but not delete them, and the underlying edit log is retained even when named versions are hidden. The only reliable fix is to never create a single-paste version in the first place — which is exactly what AutoTyper does by writing the same content as paced chunks across your chosen window.
Two layers. Pacing: your draft gets written into the doc as a sequence of small chunks across the window you picked, with natural intervals between batches — Pro adds extra interval variation. Realistic editing (Pro): occasional typos appear in early chunks and get corrected later in the same draft, plus one small revision pass after the main typing finishes — the kind of small back-and-forth a real writer leaves behind.
The opposite — it produces a clean, multi-step version history. Each chunk AutoTyper writes is a normal Docs edit, so Google records it the same way it records any human edit. The result is a sequence of small revisions across time, which is exactly what ordinary drafting looks like.