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Aug 24 at 9:19 history edited Cody GrayMod CC BY-SA 4.0
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Aug 24 at 8:52 history edited Cody GrayMod CC BY-SA 4.0
added 466 characters in body
Jan 2, 2023 at 9:31 comment added Martijn Pieters Mod @PresidentJamesK.Polk Plus, the post quality system will land you in post ban hell a lot quicker for bad questions than it does for bad answers.
Jan 2, 2023 at 9:29 comment added Martijn Pieters Mod @PresidentJamesK.Polk there haven’t been many questions and even fewer that were on topic. The post that sparked this debate was closed as a duplicate, and the error made was not unlike something many newbies might have made. Had the term “ChatGPT” not been included in the post no-one would have noticed.
Jan 2, 2023 at 6:04 comment added Bergi It is not OK to spam 20 questions at once (and probably runs into a ban anyway). It is not ok to copy code from anywhere as a cheap substitution for one's own attempt. It is not OK to post a chunk of code without having a clue and asking us to debug/fix it. All of these are reasons to downvote for lack of effort, and vote to close. But it doesn't matter whether the asker uses ChatGPT for this - it also happens without, and stating the source of the copied code is still better than not stating it at all. For now, current moderation tools suffice to cope with this, we don't need a complete ban.
Jan 2, 2023 at 4:45 comment added President James K. Polk I appreciate the logic here, but I think there are more subtleties in allowing questions about chatGPT-generated code that are worth considering. I fear we will become the clean-up service for reams of chatGPT generated code that is close but still contains at least some complete nonsense. I remember one piece of python code that looked 100% correct except for a single import statement at the beginning that was utter garbage but still looked convincing. Do we want to answer those questions? We don't have reams of these yet so perhaps my concerns are premature.
Jan 1, 2023 at 23:23 comment added Martijn Pieters Mod @dbc that’s an interesting issue, to which I have no answer. If there is a license violation then presumably there’ll be an injured party that can file a DMCA takedown.
Jan 1, 2023 at 23:17 history edited Jonathan Leffler CC BY-SA 4.0
Fix trivial typos
Jan 1, 2023 at 17:01 comment added dbc Stack Overflow licensing policy is that user contributions [are] licensed under CC BY-SA, but if someone posts ChatGPT generated code, can they actually agree to such a license?
Jan 1, 2023 at 14:51 vote accept Akshay Sehgal
Jan 1, 2023 at 14:32 history edited Martijn PietersMod CC BY-SA 4.0
added 41 characters in body
Jan 1, 2023 at 14:30 comment added Martijn Pieters Mod @AkshaySehgal: If the question is about why the code produces error messages, yes, that's fine. I think that trusting ChatGPT to the point that you are surprised to see errors is unwise, but I'm not here to judge why others seem to expect ChatGPT to know about logic, maths and other programming skills.
Jan 1, 2023 at 14:27 comment added Akshay Sehgal So hypothetically (mentioned this as a comment before), if someone generated 20 pieces of code, ran them, copied the error messages and wrapped the code + trace in a problem description and posted 20 questions, that is acceptable and not banned? just to clarify
Jan 1, 2023 at 14:26 comment added Martijn Pieters Mod @AkshaySehgal: the ban is clear: don't generate questions or answers or comments with AI. This isn't such a case.
Jan 1, 2023 at 14:23 comment added Akshay Sehgal Thanks for the answer @martijnpieters, could you also elaborate on how the latter (asking a question (in your own words) about something that ChatGPT generated) fits in with the blanket ban as well?
Jan 1, 2023 at 14:21 history answered Martijn PietersMod CC BY-SA 4.0