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Nimantha
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For the sake of having a productive discussion, let's avoid naming users here, even if we know or suspect a user is posting these comments. I'd like to have a productive discussion here, not a witch hunt.

The core issue

There have been a number of comments accusing users of posting LLM-generated answers (e.g., posts created using ChatGPT). There's also been instances of users (a user?) trying to entrap others (comments encouraging users to post LLM-generated content with the hope of getting them into trouble).

Alternatives to commenting

It's totally fine that users are concerned about LLM usage on SE, but posting comments along those lines isn't generally productive, and that's neither the intended use of comments nor a useful way to report a potentially LLM-generated answer. If you believe an answer is LLM-generated, follow these directions, which can be summarized as "raise a custom moderator flag, and include as much evidence as possible".

Moving forward

Going back to accusatory comments: they aren't really helpful. If you're correct, and a user willingly admits it, then a mod is needed to address that user. But... if they willingly admitted it, chances are that asking nicely would have worked too, such as by asking "Hello userNNNNNN, did you write this answer using ChatGPT?". If you're wrong, then you've publicly accused a user of doing something they didn't do, which may lead to CoC violations or serial voting, neither of which are desirable. It can also lead to revenge-accusations, which are, of course, also problematic.

But, that still leaves the line somewhat unclear. For a few examples of comments:

Where exactly do we want to draw the line between acceptable and unacceptable comments regarding suspected AI-generated answers?

For the sake of having a productive discussion, let's avoid naming users here, even if we know or suspect a user is posting these comments. I'd like to have a productive discussion here, not a witch hunt.

The core issue

There have been a number of comments accusing users of posting LLM-generated answers (e.g., posts created using ChatGPT). There's also been instances of users (a user?) trying to entrap others (comments encouraging users to post LLM-generated content with the hope of getting them into trouble).

Alternatives to commenting

It's totally fine that users are concerned about LLM usage on SE, but posting comments along those lines isn't generally productive, and that's neither the intended use of comments nor a useful way to report a potentially LLM-generated answer. If you believe an answer is LLM-generated, follow these directions, which can be summarized as "raise a custom moderator flag, and include as much evidence as possible".

Moving forward

Going back to accusatory comments: they aren't really helpful. If you're correct, and a user willingly admits it, then a mod is needed to address that user. But... if they willingly admitted it, chances are that asking nicely would have worked too, such as by asking "Hello userNNNNNN, did you write this answer using ChatGPT?". If you're wrong, then you've publicly accused a user of doing something they didn't do, which may lead to CoC violations or serial voting, neither of which are desirable. It can also lead to revenge-accusations, which are, of course, also problematic.

But, that still leaves the line somewhat unclear. For a few examples of comments:

Where exactly do we want to draw the line between acceptable and unacceptable comments regarding suspected AI-generated answers?

The core issue

There have been a number of comments accusing users of posting LLM-generated answers (e.g., posts created using ChatGPT). There's also been instances of users (a user?) trying to entrap others (comments encouraging users to post LLM-generated content with the hope of getting them into trouble).

Alternatives to commenting

It's totally fine that users are concerned about LLM usage on SE, but posting comments along those lines isn't generally productive, and that's neither the intended use of comments nor a useful way to report a potentially LLM-generated answer. If you believe an answer is LLM-generated, follow these directions, which can be summarized as "raise a custom moderator flag, and include as much evidence as possible".

Moving forward

Going back to accusatory comments: they aren't really helpful. If you're correct, and a user willingly admits it, then a mod is needed to address that user. But... if they willingly admitted it, chances are that asking nicely would have worked too, such as by asking "Hello userNNNNNN, did you write this answer using ChatGPT?". If you're wrong, then you've publicly accused a user of doing something they didn't do, which may lead to CoC violations or serial voting, neither of which are desirable. It can also lead to revenge-accusations, which are, of course, also problematic.

But, that still leaves the line somewhat unclear. For a few examples of comments:

Where exactly do we want to draw the line between acceptable and unacceptable comments regarding suspected AI-generated answers?

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cocomac
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What rules should there be for commenting on answers that are suspected to be AI-generated?

For the sake of having a productive discussion, let's avoid naming users here, even if we know or suspect a user is posting these comments. I'd like to have a productive discussion here, not a witch hunt.

The core issue

There have been a number of comments accusing users of posting LLM-generated answers (e.g., posts created using ChatGPT). There's also been instances of users (a user?) trying to entrap others (comments encouraging users to post LLM-generated content with the hope of getting them into trouble).

Alternatives to commenting

It's totally fine that users are concerned about LLM usage on SE, but posting comments along those lines isn't generally productive, and that's neither the intended use of comments nor a useful way to report a potentially LLM-generated answer. If you believe an answer is LLM-generated, follow these directions, which can be summarized as "raise a custom moderator flag, and include as much evidence as possible".

Moving forward

Going back to accusatory comments: they aren't really helpful. If you're correct, and a user willingly admits it, then a mod is needed to address that user. But... if they willingly admitted it, chances are that asking nicely would have worked too, such as by asking "Hello userNNNNNN, did you write this answer using ChatGPT?". If you're wrong, then you've publicly accused a user of doing something they didn't do, which may lead to CoC violations or serial voting, neither of which are desirable. It can also lead to revenge-accusations, which are, of course, also problematic.

But, that still leaves the line somewhat unclear. For a few examples of comments:

Where exactly do we want to draw the line between acceptable and unacceptable comments regarding suspected AI-generated answers?