From the Sharing & publication policy (archive link):
Content co-authored with the OpenAI API
Creators who wish to publish their first-party written content (e.g., a book, compendium of short stories) created in part with the OpenAI API are permitted to do so under the following conditions:
- [...]
- The role of AI in formulating the content is clearly disclosed in a way that no reader could possibly miss, and that a typical reader would find sufficiently easy to understand.
- [...]
For instance, one must detail in a Foreword or Introduction (or some place similar) the relative roles of drafting, editing, etc. People should not represent API-generated content as being wholly generated by a human or wholly generated by an AI, and it is a human who must take ultimate responsibility for the content being published.
Here is some stock language you may use to describe your creative process, provided it is accurate:
The author generated this text in part with GPT-3, OpenAI’s large-scale language-generation model. Upon generating draft language, the author reviewed, edited, and revised the language to their own liking and takes ultimate responsibility for the content of this publication.
To my knowledge, neither the title-generator nor the formatting assistant included any such notices into the post, right?
As for why I feel confident that these projects used OpenAI things, I once got "As an AI language model, I [...]" when fiddling with the formatting assistant. To me, that spells it out pretty clearly.