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Thom A
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If you encounter content you think is AI generated content, flag it using a custom moderator flag; we all know this is what you should be doing.

As for voting to delete, I disagree with this stance; it is the moderators role to be dealing with those who break the rules of the community. They have the tools to deal with it, they can reach out to the user with a mod message, and can also impose restrictions on the account (such as suspensions) when needed. A mod-deleted post also cannot be undeleted by the community, it must be deletedundeleted by a moderator therefore. Therefore if the user feels that it's been incorrectly handled they have to communicate with the mods, who again are the correct people to handle it. Most likely the user has been reached out to by the moderator team so they already have an avenue open.

This stance doesn't just exist for AI-generated content though. Spam and plagiarism are other examples; you should be flagging to such content not voting to delete it. Deleting the content doesn't make the moderator team aware of the user breaking the rules and doesn't put a "red mark" against them should they continue to break the rules.

If we just vote to delete AI-Generated content then, likely, these user will continue to post the content (especially as some are users with 1,000's of reputation points and thus are unlikely to end up with an answer ban/rate-limit). We, as users, cannot stop another user from posting nor can we, in an "official" capacity tell a user to stop. To repeat myself, that is the role of the moderators (we elected). We trust them to enforce the rules, and so we should be allowing them to do so.

If you encounter content you think is AI generated content, flag it using a custom moderator flag; we all know this is what you should be doing.

As for voting to delete, I disagree with this stance; it is the moderators role to be dealing with those who break the rules of the community. They have the tools to deal with it, they can reach out to the user with a mod message, and can also impose restrictions on the account (such as suspensions) when needed. A mod-deleted post also cannot be undeleted by the community, it must be deleted by a moderator therefore if the user feels that it's been incorrectly handled they have to communicate with the mods, who again are the correct people to handle it. Most likely the user has been reached out to by the moderator team so they already have an avenue open.

This stance doesn't just exist for AI-generated content though. Spam and plagiarism are other examples; you should be flagging to such content not voting to delete it. Deleting the content doesn't make the moderator team aware of the user breaking the rules and doesn't put a "red mark" against them should they continue to break the rules.

If we just vote to delete AI-Generated content then, likely, these user will continue to post the content (especially as some are users with 1,000's of reputation points and thus are unlikely to end up with an answer ban/rate-limit). We, as users, cannot stop another user from posting nor can we, in an "official" capacity tell a user to stop. To repeat myself, that is the role of the moderators (we elected). We trust them to enforce the rules, and so we should be allowing them to do so.

If you encounter content you think is AI generated content, flag it using a custom moderator flag; we all know this is what you should be doing.

As for voting to delete, I disagree with this stance; it is the moderators role to be dealing with those who break the rules of the community. They have the tools to deal with it, they can reach out to the user with a mod message, and can also impose restrictions on the account (such as suspensions) when needed. A mod-deleted post also cannot be undeleted by the community, it must be undeleted by a moderator. Therefore if the user feels that it's been incorrectly handled they have to communicate with the mods, who again are the correct people to handle it. Most likely the user has been reached out to by the moderator team so they already have an avenue open.

This stance doesn't just exist for AI-generated content though. Spam and plagiarism are other examples; you should be flagging to such content not voting to delete it. Deleting the content doesn't make the moderator team aware of the user breaking the rules and doesn't put a "red mark" against them should they continue to break the rules.

If we just vote to delete AI-Generated content then, likely, these user will continue to post the content (especially as some are users with 1,000's of reputation points and thus are unlikely to end up with an answer ban/rate-limit). We, as users, cannot stop another user from posting nor can we, in an "official" capacity tell a user to stop. To repeat myself, that is the role of the moderators (we elected). We trust them to enforce the rules, and so we should be allowing them to do so.

Source Link
Thom A
  • 95.1k
  • 7
  • 113
  • 165

If you encounter content you think is AI generated content, flag it using a custom moderator flag; we all know this is what you should be doing.

As for voting to delete, I disagree with this stance; it is the moderators role to be dealing with those who break the rules of the community. They have the tools to deal with it, they can reach out to the user with a mod message, and can also impose restrictions on the account (such as suspensions) when needed. A mod-deleted post also cannot be undeleted by the community, it must be deleted by a moderator therefore if the user feels that it's been incorrectly handled they have to communicate with the mods, who again are the correct people to handle it. Most likely the user has been reached out to by the moderator team so they already have an avenue open.

This stance doesn't just exist for AI-generated content though. Spam and plagiarism are other examples; you should be flagging to such content not voting to delete it. Deleting the content doesn't make the moderator team aware of the user breaking the rules and doesn't put a "red mark" against them should they continue to break the rules.

If we just vote to delete AI-Generated content then, likely, these user will continue to post the content (especially as some are users with 1,000's of reputation points and thus are unlikely to end up with an answer ban/rate-limit). We, as users, cannot stop another user from posting nor can we, in an "official" capacity tell a user to stop. To repeat myself, that is the role of the moderators (we elected). We trust them to enforce the rules, and so we should be allowing them to do so.