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Moved one paragraph to the top; Make it clear that the use case presented is about the potential permanant ban of ChatGPT generated content.
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Wicket
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Banning all ChatGPT answers is a good temporary move, as it opens a time window where it could be discussed thoroughly, but it, IMO, shouldn't be permanent, as it could also help if used according to its capabilities and by acknowledging its limitations.

Consider the following situation:

Someone sees a question they know the answer to.

They don't want to worry about the structure of the answer, so they use ChatGPT with a prompt that directs it towards the correct answer of the problem (for example, if the question is "How do I remove and get the last element of an array?", a possible prompt might be "Using the array.pop method, write a Stack Overflow answer to the question ..."

They then check and verify the answer to see if ChatGPT has done any mistakes, and either direct ChatGPT to correct the answer, or correct it themselves.

They then post the answer.

Is this helpful to SO? I would assume it is as the user who asked their question gets an answer that works, and the answerer spends less time formulating and explaining the answer and more time worrying about the correctness of the answer. As ChatGPT is a language model, here it would have been used correctly according to its capabilities (language and not programming - the programming knowledge comes from the answerer).

Should this be banned permanently? BanningPermanently banning all ChatGPT answers means this should be banned as well, even though it actually is helpful to the Q&A format we have going on here.

Banning all ChatGPT answers is a good temporary move, as it opens a time window where it could be discussed thoroughly, but it, IMO, shouldn't be permanent, as it could also help if used according to its capabilities and by acknowledging its limitations.

Bad ChatGPT answers are just bad answers, and I don't think we should have another rule specifically for ChatGPT. Spamming good-looking but bad answers with AI tools and abandoning them to "see the numbers go up" should be the behavior that is banned.

Consider the following situation:

Someone sees a question they know the answer to.

They don't want to worry about the structure of the answer, so they use ChatGPT with a prompt that directs it towards the correct answer of the problem (for example, if the question is "How do I remove and get the last element of an array?", a possible prompt might be "Using the array.pop method, write a Stack Overflow answer to the question ..."

They then check and verify the answer to see if ChatGPT has done any mistakes, and either direct ChatGPT to correct the answer, or correct it themselves.

They then post the answer.

Is this helpful to SO? I would assume it is as the user who asked their question gets an answer that works, and the answerer spends less time formulating and explaining the answer and more time worrying about the correctness of the answer. As ChatGPT is a language model, here it would have been used correctly according to its capabilities (language and not programming - the programming knowledge comes from the answerer).

Should this be banned? Banning all ChatGPT answers means this should be banned as well, even though it actually is helpful to the Q&A format we have going on here.

Banning all ChatGPT answers is a good temporary move, as it opens a time window where it could be discussed thoroughly, but it, IMO, shouldn't be permanent, as it could also help if used according to its capabilities and by acknowledging its limitations.

Bad ChatGPT answers are just bad answers, and I don't think we should have another rule specifically for ChatGPT. Spamming good-looking but bad answers with AI tools and abandoning them to "see the numbers go up" should be the behavior that is banned.

Banning all ChatGPT answers is a good temporary move, as it opens a time window where it could be discussed thoroughly, but it, IMO, shouldn't be permanent, as it could also help if used according to its capabilities and by acknowledging its limitations.

Consider the following situation:

Someone sees a question they know the answer to.

They don't want to worry about the structure of the answer, so they use ChatGPT with a prompt that directs it towards the correct answer of the problem (for example, if the question is "How do I remove and get the last element of an array?", a possible prompt might be "Using the array.pop method, write a Stack Overflow answer to the question ..."

They then check and verify the answer to see if ChatGPT has done any mistakes, and either direct ChatGPT to correct the answer, or correct it themselves.

They then post the answer.

Is this helpful to SO? I would assume it is as the user who asked their question gets an answer that works, and the answerer spends less time formulating and explaining the answer and more time worrying about the correctness of the answer. As ChatGPT is a language model, here it would have been used correctly according to its capabilities (language and not programming - the programming knowledge comes from the answerer).

Should this be banned permanently? Permanently banning all ChatGPT answers means this should be banned as well, even though it actually is helpful to the Q&A format we have going on here.

Bad ChatGPT answers are just bad answers, and I don't think we should have another rule specifically for ChatGPT. Spamming good-looking but bad answers with AI tools and abandoning them to "see the numbers go up" should be the behavior that is banned.

Active reading [<https://stackoverflow.design/brand/copywriting/naming/> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Q%26A_software> <https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/thoroughly#Adverb> <https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/good-looking#Adjective>].
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Peter Mortensen
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Consider the following situation:

Someone sees a question they know the answer to.

They don't want to worry about the structure of the answer, so they use ChatGPT with a prompt that directs it towards the correct answer of the problem (for example, if the question is "How do I remove and get the last element of an array?", a possible prompt might be "Using the array.pop method, write a Stack Overflow answer to the question ..."

They then check and verify the answer to see if ChatGPT has done any mistakes, and either direct ChatGPT to correct the answer, or correct it themselves.

They then post the answer.

Is this helpful to SO? I would assume it is as the user who asked their question gets an answer that works, and the answerer spends less time formulating and explaining the answer and more time worrying about the correctness of the answer. As ChatGPT is a language model, here it would have been used correctly according to its capabilities (language and not programming - the programming knowledge comes from the answerer).

Should this be banned? Banning all ChatGPT answers means this should be banned as well, even though it actually is helpful to the Q&A format we have going on here.

Banning all ChatGPT answers is a good temporary move, as it opens a time window where it could be discussed thoroughly, but it, IMO, shouldn't be permanent, as it could also help if used according to its capabilities and by acknowledging its limitations.

Bad ChatGPT answers are just bad answers, and I don't think we should have another rule specifically for ChatGPT. Spamming good-looking, but bad, answers with AI tools and abandoning them to "see the numbers go up" should be the behavior that is banned.

Consider the following situation:

Someone sees a question they know the answer to.

They don't want to worry about the structure of the answer, so they use ChatGPT with a prompt that directs it towards the correct answer of the problem (for example, if the question is "How do I remove and get the last element of an array?", a possible prompt might be "Using the array.pop method, write a Stack Overflow answer to the question ..."

They then check and verify the answer to see if ChatGPT has done any mistakes, and either direct ChatGPT to correct the answer, or correct it themselves.

They then post the answer.

Is this helpful to SO? I would assume it is as the user who asked their question gets an answer that works, and the answerer spends less time formulating and explaining the answer and more time worrying about the correctness of the answer. As ChatGPT is a language model, here it would have been used correctly according to its capabilities (language and not programming - the programming knowledge comes from the answerer).

Should this be banned? Banning all ChatGPT answers means this should be banned as well, even though it actually is helpful to the Q&A format we have going on here.

Banning all ChatGPT answers is a good temporary move, as it opens a time window where it could be discussed thoroughly, but it, IMO, shouldn't be permanent, as it could also help if used according to its capabilities and by acknowledging its limitations.

Bad ChatGPT answers are just bad answers, and I don't think we should have another rule specifically for ChatGPT. Spamming good-looking, but bad, answers with AI tools and abandoning them to "see the numbers go up" should be the behavior that is banned.

Consider the following situation:

Someone sees a question they know the answer to.

They don't want to worry about the structure of the answer, so they use ChatGPT with a prompt that directs it towards the correct answer of the problem (for example, if the question is "How do I remove and get the last element of an array?", a possible prompt might be "Using the array.pop method, write a Stack Overflow answer to the question ..."

They then check and verify the answer to see if ChatGPT has done any mistakes, and either direct ChatGPT to correct the answer, or correct it themselves.

They then post the answer.

Is this helpful to SO? I would assume it is as the user who asked their question gets an answer that works, and the answerer spends less time formulating and explaining the answer and more time worrying about the correctness of the answer. As ChatGPT is a language model, here it would have been used correctly according to its capabilities (language and not programming - the programming knowledge comes from the answerer).

Should this be banned? Banning all ChatGPT answers means this should be banned as well, even though it actually is helpful to the Q&A format we have going on here.

Banning all ChatGPT answers is a good temporary move, as it opens a time window where it could be discussed thoroughly, but it, IMO, shouldn't be permanent, as it could also help if used according to its capabilities and by acknowledging its limitations.

Bad ChatGPT answers are just bad answers, and I don't think we should have another rule specifically for ChatGPT. Spamming good-looking but bad answers with AI tools and abandoning them to "see the numbers go up" should be the behavior that is banned.

Active reading [<https://stackoverflow.design/brand/copywriting/naming/> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Q%26A_software> <https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/thoroughly#Adverb> <https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/good-looking#Adjective>].
Source Link
Peter Mortensen
  • 31.6k
  • 4
  • 22
  • 14

Consider the following situation:

Someone sees a question they know the answer to.

They don't want to worry about the structure of the answer, so they use ChatGPT with a prompt that directs it towards the correct answer of the problem (for example, if the question is "How do I remove and get the last element of an array?", a possible prompt might be "Using the array.pop method, write a Stack Overflow answer to the question ..."

They then check and verify the answer to see if ChatGPT has done any mistakes, and either direct ChatGPT to correct the answer, or correct it themselves.

They then post the answer.

Is this helpful to SO? I would assume it is as the user who asked their question gets an answer that works, and the answerer spends less time formulating and explaining the answer and more time worrying about the correctness of the answer. As ChatGPT is a language model, here it would have been used correctly according to its capabilities (language and not programming - the programming knowledge comes from the answerer).

Should this be banned? Banning all ChatGPT answers means this should be banned as well, even though it actually is helpful to the Q&A format we have going on here.

Banning all ChatGPT answers is a good temporary move, as it opens a time window where it could be discussed thoroughly, but it, IMO, shouldn't be permanent, as it could also help if used according to its capabilities and by acknowledging its limitations.

Bad ChatGPT answers are just bad answers, and I don't think we should have another rule specifically for ChatGPT. Spamming good looking-looking, but bad, answers with AI tools and abandoning them to "see the numbers go up" should be the behavior that is banned.

Consider the following situation:

Someone sees a question they know the answer to.

They don't want to worry about the structure of the answer, so they use ChatGPT with a prompt that directs it towards the correct answer of the problem (for example, if the question is "How do I remove and get the last element of an array?", a possible prompt might be "Using the array.pop method, write a Stack Overflow answer to the question ..."

They then check and verify the answer to see if ChatGPT has done any mistakes, and either direct ChatGPT to correct the answer, or correct it themselves.

They then post the answer.

Is this helpful to SO? I would assume it is as the user who asked their question gets an answer that works, and the answerer spends less time formulating and explaining the answer and more time worrying about the correctness of the answer. As ChatGPT is a language model, here it would have been used correctly according to its capabilities (language and not programming - the programming knowledge comes from the answerer).

Should this be banned? Banning all ChatGPT answers means this should be banned as well, even though it actually is helpful to the Q&A format we have going on here.

Banning all ChatGPT answers is a good temporary move, as it opens a time window where it could be discussed thoroughly, but it IMO shouldn't be permanent, as it could also help if used according to its capabilities and by acknowledging its limitations.

Bad ChatGPT answers are just bad answers, and I don't think we should have another rule specifically for ChatGPT. Spamming good looking but bad answers with AI tools and abandoning them to "see the numbers go up" should be the behavior that is banned.

Consider the following situation:

Someone sees a question they know the answer to.

They don't want to worry about the structure of the answer, so they use ChatGPT with a prompt that directs it towards the correct answer of the problem (for example, if the question is "How do I remove and get the last element of an array?", a possible prompt might be "Using the array.pop method, write a Stack Overflow answer to the question ..."

They then check and verify the answer to see if ChatGPT has done any mistakes, and either direct ChatGPT to correct the answer, or correct it themselves.

They then post the answer.

Is this helpful to SO? I would assume it is as the user who asked their question gets an answer that works, and the answerer spends less time formulating and explaining the answer and more time worrying about the correctness of the answer. As ChatGPT is a language model, here it would have been used correctly according to its capabilities (language and not programming - the programming knowledge comes from the answerer).

Should this be banned? Banning all ChatGPT answers means this should be banned as well, even though it actually is helpful to the Q&A format we have going on here.

Banning all ChatGPT answers is a good temporary move, as it opens a time window where it could be discussed thoroughly, but it, IMO, shouldn't be permanent, as it could also help if used according to its capabilities and by acknowledging its limitations.

Bad ChatGPT answers are just bad answers, and I don't think we should have another rule specifically for ChatGPT. Spamming good-looking, but bad, answers with AI tools and abandoning them to "see the numbers go up" should be the behavior that is banned.

Active reading [<https://stackoverflow.design/brand/copywriting/naming/> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Q%26A_software> <https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/thoroughly#Adverb>].
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Peter Mortensen
  • 31.6k
  • 4
  • 22
  • 14
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