Skip to main content
12 events
when toggle format what by license comment
May 23, 2023 at 19:28 comment added Michael come lately Discover dups before lots of question-writing has taken place. Discover best possible dup target. Suggest good titles. Suggest good tags. Don't put tags in the title suggestion. etc.
May 23, 2023 at 19:25 comment added Michael come lately Writing the title last is a good exercise, but it does have the impact of delaying the duplicate suggester (unless that is also changing). You have this weird set of circular dependencies (see below) and SO Inc ultimately has to decide which bits are more important to them.
May 11, 2023 at 7:28 comment added Yaakov Ellis StaffMod We can only test the suggested titles properly once the body has been composed. So anyway, we were going to be moving title to the end. So while we are doing this, we are also going to be testing the variant of moving the title to the end while hiding it in the beginning. In essence, there are two things being tested here, thus 4 variants (including the baseline), so we will be able to isolate the effects of each one. And TylerH - I know you are seeing this.
May 11, 2023 at 5:41 comment added Cody Gray Mod Yes. Moving boxes around has nothing to do with AI assistance. Do not mix the two of them. People (including yours truly) have been suggesting to move these boxes around for years, long before AI was a buzzword. Also, yeah, only the people who already wrote good titles are going to know what a good title is and whether to accept, reject, or modify an AI-generated title. Everyone else is just going to accept whatever the AI generated. Then it'll be on the small number of us who know how to write a good title to decide whether the AI-generated title is acceptable. So, really, nothing's changed.
May 11, 2023 at 3:36 comment added wizzwizz4 @Makoto Machine learning systems aren't like real brains, in that they don't automatically "learn" from data when you use them to operate over that data. I would be quite surprised if Stack Overflow's implementation blurred those lines (though other companies pulling such a stunt wouldn't surprise me in the slightest).
May 11, 2023 at 0:10 comment added The Guy with The Hat Stack Overflow already does server-side stuff before you hit "submit". For example, it tries to find duplicate questions based on your title, which obviously requires sending your title to the servers to do a search of some sort. AFAIK, it's been like that for many years. I don't see how passing your question body through an LLM is much different from passing your title through a search engine.
May 10, 2023 at 21:11 comment added Makoto @Marijn: It does. As in, there's a very clear boundary between me putting something into the question box and hitting submit. This blurs that substantially. If I don't consent to or agree to the publication terms but am OK with everything else (which, btw, you can do; you don't have to submit things to the site but you are otherwise bound by other usage terms), then Stack Overflow is, without express consent, taking my content and licensing it.
May 10, 2023 at 20:11 comment added Marijn For the license issue: I'm not sure this actually counts as "using your content" as long as the content and the generated title are not stored server-side. For me this is similar to generating a rendered preview of the question, proposing related questions, checking for content issues that prevent a question from posting etc; all of those are processing of the data before submitting the question.
May 10, 2023 at 19:56 history undeleted Makoto
May 10, 2023 at 19:56 history edited Makoto CC BY-SA 4.0
added 1033 characters in body
May 10, 2023 at 18:58 history deleted Makoto via Vote
May 10, 2023 at 18:58 history answered Makoto CC BY-SA 4.0