I've received some emails promoting software that generates articles to be scattered around the web (in the interest of getting links). I always wondered what these articles might look like and I think I've come across one today via my Google Alert for personal productivity. It's about corporate speakers and here's a sample:
"For overdo events, veteran corporate speakers can yield the high-energy voice for your aim assembly as good as emanate prominence for your event. Good corporate speakers enlarge the odds which your aim assembly will embrace as good as recollect the dictated message."
Sounds like one of those bad translations that used to be featured for comic effect on some talk shows.
Here's another sample from an article about dogs:
"Who’s the great boy? Who’s the gooooood booooy? Yes, we are, approbation we is! Here we go the vast tanned hide bone usually for we as well as the vast messy dog lick for me. If we consider we baby my dog as well most we wouldn’t be wrong; Bear earns each bit of regard he gets, from his laying around usually seeking big, to his really protecting as well as really insistant approach he has with strangers."
I don't think real writers have anything to be worried about yet.
(Make sure your writing doesn't sound like it was composed by robots--get my book,"Your Writing Coach" from Amazon or your other favorite online or offline bookseller.)