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May 26, 2023 at 23:11 comment added Seth The process of writing a question (and its title) by itself is an exercise in troubleshooting your problem. If you are able to write it down and clearly explain what it is, you're 90% of the way toward a solution. Now here comes along Mr. AI telling you that what you're writing is unclear and then tries to "help" by twisting your words. All that work you've done trying to express your problem is erased. To a non-native english speaker, the problem is worse because they may be unable to tell the difference between the AI-suggested text and their own. I can't see how this helps anyone.
May 21, 2023 at 16:12 comment added Fattie IanKemp - thanks for putting in this answer, which is the best answer here.
May 15, 2023 at 7:44 comment added Ian Kemp @mirekphd That will result in better titles for worse questions, which will only exacerbate the problem.
May 13, 2023 at 17:23 history edited Ian Kemp CC BY-SA 4.0
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May 13, 2023 at 14:42 comment added mirekphd The community of researchers training and open-sourcing language models that will likely be used here by SO seems to disagree, selecting the site for their training sets, together with e.g. Project Gutenberg, Wikipedia and (non-copylefted) Github. All it takes is to filter the site data using quality metrics such as upvotes, discarding the rest (which will still be a valid strategy, ignoring the new "AI-polished turds":).
May 13, 2023 at 9:12 comment added NoDataDumpNoContribution I wonder what the suggested titles for "Here is my code so far, It's not doing what I want" type of questions will be? A correct title would probably be "I have a problem somewhere".
May 13, 2023 at 5:50 comment added Cody Gray Mod It won't be nearly as bad as you say. The AI will only be able to write superficially good-sounding titles. They won't actually be good titles, probably won't even relate to the question, and the people who will use the AI to generate their titles won't know the difference, so they'll just accept whatever is offered. This means you & I (and everyone else who uses titles and other metadata as a proxy to judge the quality of a question and thus gauge our interest in it) will still be able to do so unaffected. Now, if the follow-up question is, "Then why do it?", I don't have an answer for that
May 12, 2023 at 20:38 comment added starball I think there's a large class of questions that you'll still be able to tell something about. See my answer post- particularly the part with the geode/gem analogy.
May 12, 2023 at 20:38 comment added NoDataDumpNoContribution Related: no matter how much you polish a turd, it'll always remain a turd
May 12, 2023 at 19:17 history answered Ian Kemp CC BY-SA 4.0