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Left closed in review as "Original close reason(s) were not resolved" by cottontail, Cody GrayMod
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Is it acceptable to post answers with code partially generated by an AI, such as GitHub Copilot?

Today, I stumbled upon this answer. In that answer, there is an explanation with the code:

This code was written by Github Copilot with minimal supervision

and nothing else. I see some potential problems with this:

  • user submitting such an answer might not be able to reason about the answer at all
  • there is high rate of incorrectness with Copilot generated code (source1, source2)
  • does the user even have the rights to submit such code into Stack Overflow

What do you think, is this ok? If not, what should be done about them?

And what is the policy in general about users merely being assisted by Github Copilot to write some code to be able to answer a question, especially if they include a benchmark and reproducible code to show that it works. I see some mentioning that being inspired by Github Copilot code to answer a question is OK. But again unclear what % of code can or cannot be Github Copilot code & if usage should or should not be disclosed. 1 line, 10 lines, all of the code of a given post?

Is it acceptable to post answers with code partially generated by an AI, such as GitHub Copilot?

Today, I stumbled upon this answer. In that answer, there is an explanation with the code:

This code was written by Github Copilot with minimal supervision

and nothing else. I see some potential problems with this:

  • user submitting such an answer might not be able to reason about the answer at all
  • there is high rate of incorrectness with Copilot generated code (source1, source2)
  • does the user even have the rights to submit such code into Stack Overflow

What do you think, is this ok? If not, what should be done about them?

And what is the policy in general about users merely being assisted by Github Copilot to write some code to be able to answer a question, especially if they include a benchmark and reproducible code to show that it works. I see some mentioning that being inspired by Github Copilot code to answer a question is OK. But again unclear what % of code can or cannot be Github Copilot code & if usage should or should not be disclosed. 1 line, 10 lines, all of the code of a given post?

Is it acceptable to post answers generated by an AI, such as GitHub Copilot?

Today, I stumbled upon this answer. In that answer, there is an explanation with the code:

This code was written by Github Copilot with minimal supervision

and nothing else. I see some potential problems with this:

  • user submitting such an answer might not be able to reason about the answer at all
  • there is high rate of incorrectness with Copilot generated code (source1, source2)
  • does the user even have the rights to submit such code into Stack Overflow

What do you think, is this ok? If not, what should be done about them?

added 51 characters in body
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Today, I stumbled upon this answer. In that answer, there is an explanation with the code:

This code was written by Github Copilot with minimal supervision

and nothing else. I see some potential problems with this:

  • user submitting such an answer might not be able to reason about the answer at all
  • there is high rate of incorrectness with Copilot generated code (source1, source2)
  • does the user even have the rights to submit such code into Stack Overflow

What do you think, is this ok? If not, what should be done about them?

And what is the policy in general about users merely being assisted by Github Copilot to write some code to be able to answer a question, especially if they include a benchmark and reproducible code to show that it works. I see some mentioning that being inspired by Github Copilot code to answer a question is OK. But again unclear what % of code can or cannot be Github Copilot code & if usage should or should not be disclosed. 1 line, 10 lines, all of the code of a given post?

Today, I stumbled upon this answer. In that answer, there is an explanation with the code:

This code was written by Github Copilot with minimal supervision

and nothing else. I see some potential problems with this:

  • user submitting such an answer might not be able to reason about the answer at all
  • there is high rate of incorrectness with Copilot generated code (source1, source2)
  • does the user even have the rights to submit such code into Stack Overflow

What do you think, is this ok? If not, what should be done about them?

And what is the policy in general about users merely being assisted by Github Copilot to write some code to be able to answer a question, especially if they include a benchmark and reproducible code to show that it works. I see some mentioning that being inspired by Github Copilot code to answer a question is OK. But again unclear what % of code can or cannot be Github Copilot code & if usage should or should not be disclosed.

Today, I stumbled upon this answer. In that answer, there is an explanation with the code:

This code was written by Github Copilot with minimal supervision

and nothing else. I see some potential problems with this:

  • user submitting such an answer might not be able to reason about the answer at all
  • there is high rate of incorrectness with Copilot generated code (source1, source2)
  • does the user even have the rights to submit such code into Stack Overflow

What do you think, is this ok? If not, what should be done about them?

And what is the policy in general about users merely being assisted by Github Copilot to write some code to be able to answer a question, especially if they include a benchmark and reproducible code to show that it works. I see some mentioning that being inspired by Github Copilot code to answer a question is OK. But again unclear what % of code can or cannot be Github Copilot code & if usage should or should not be disclosed. 1 line, 10 lines, all of the code of a given post?

Asking for clarification on allowed usage when merely being assisted or inspired by Github Copilot code
Source Link

Is it acceptable to post answers with code partially generated by an AI, such as GitHub Copilot?

Today, I stumbled upon this answer. In that answer, there is an explanation with the code:

This code was written by Github Copilot with minimal supervision

and nothing else. I see some potential problems with this:

  • user submitting such an answer might not be able to reason about the answer at all
  • there is high rate of incorrectness with Copilot generated code (source1, source2)
  • does the user even have the rights to submit such code into Stack Overflow

What do you think, is this ok? If not, what should be done about them?

And what is the policy in general about users merely being assisted by Github Copilot to write some code to be able to answer a question, especially if they include a benchmark and reproducible code to show that it works. I see some mentioning that being inspired by Github Copilot code to answer a question is OK. But again unclear what % of code can or cannot be Github Copilot code & if usage should or should not be disclosed.

Is it acceptable to post answers generated by an AI, such as GitHub Copilot?

Today, I stumbled upon this answer. In that answer, there is an explanation with the code:

This code was written by Github Copilot with minimal supervision

and nothing else. I see some potential problems with this:

  • user submitting such an answer might not be able to reason about the answer at all
  • there is high rate of incorrectness with Copilot generated code (source1, source2)
  • does the user even have the rights to submit such code into Stack Overflow

What do you think, is this ok? If not, what should be done about them?

Is it acceptable to post answers with code partially generated by an AI, such as GitHub Copilot?

Today, I stumbled upon this answer. In that answer, there is an explanation with the code:

This code was written by Github Copilot with minimal supervision

and nothing else. I see some potential problems with this:

  • user submitting such an answer might not be able to reason about the answer at all
  • there is high rate of incorrectness with Copilot generated code (source1, source2)
  • does the user even have the rights to submit such code into Stack Overflow

What do you think, is this ok? If not, what should be done about them?

And what is the policy in general about users merely being assisted by Github Copilot to write some code to be able to answer a question, especially if they include a benchmark and reproducible code to show that it works. I see some mentioning that being inspired by Github Copilot code to answer a question is OK. But again unclear what % of code can or cannot be Github Copilot code & if usage should or should not be disclosed.

Left closed in review as "Original close reason(s) were not resolved" by Wai Ha Lee, cottontail, Robert Longson
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