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cottontail
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AIs will become another member of the community—and the community can decide the quality, accuracy, and value of their contributions.

No.

Check out the definitions in Merriam-Webster or on Wikipedia. You see words and phrases like "social unit", "group of living things", "shared socially significant characteristic", "people with common interests", "body of persons", "interacting population of various kinds of individuals (such as species)". Tools are not part of a community. The community is only the people.

I think it's wrong to ignore AI. It can unlock some new possibilities for how people interact with each other and artifacts they produce, where "artifacts" in the context of Stack Overflow and the Stack Exchange Network include questions, answers, comments, discussions, articles, chat messages.

People, however, must come first. And I see a potential glimmer of hope when you talk about onboarding and engaging the users - the people that generate and consume content - across the Network. However, this needs to take precedence over "the AI focus".

Developers need tools and resources to produce quality, safe, and secure products, while enterprises need to trust the tools and resources to not introduce risk to their business.

This is key.

Your own 2023 Developer Survey revealed that over 25% of developers do not trust the accuracy of the output of AI tools. Although large numbers of respondents do see potential benefits of and have favorable sentiments toward such tools. A recent ACM TechBrief cites a study out of the University of QueeslandQueensland and KPMG Australia that found over 60% of people globally do not trust AI.

I'm honestly not sure what angle I want to take here - as someone interested and involved in technology ethics, as an expert on tool qualification who is also involved in build and buy decisions, as a member of the Stack Exchange community and a moderator on two Network sites. From all of these angles, I don't see things coming out of the company that demonstrate the ability to help developers with quality or help enterprises reduce risk. In fact, I see the opposite. I see decisions or thinking that is actively harmful to trusting not only the content on the Network, but making it more difficult to have organizations that I have more trust in build trustworthy tools.

And this goes back to needing a people-centric focus. Human people need to be at the heart of every decision. But it seems like trying to cram "AI" everywhere because it's a buzzword is what's really at the heart of company decision making. And that's going to lead to a lack of trust in the product and, more importantly, the data.

AIs will become another member of the community—and the community can decide the quality, accuracy, and value of their contributions.

No.

Check out the definitions in Merriam-Webster or on Wikipedia. You see words and phrases like "social unit", "group of living things", "shared socially significant characteristic", "people with common interests", "body of persons", "interacting population of various kinds of individuals (such as species)". Tools are not part of a community. The community is only the people.

I think it's wrong to ignore AI. It can unlock some new possibilities for how people interact with each other and artifacts they produce, where "artifacts" in the context of Stack Overflow and the Stack Exchange Network include questions, answers, comments, discussions, articles, chat messages.

People, however, must come first. And I see a potential glimmer of hope when you talk about onboarding and engaging the users - the people that generate and consume content - across the Network. However, this needs to take precedence over "the AI focus".

Developers need tools and resources to produce quality, safe, and secure products, while enterprises need to trust the tools and resources to not introduce risk to their business.

This is key.

Your own 2023 Developer Survey revealed that over 25% of developers do not trust the accuracy of the output of AI tools. Although large numbers of respondents do see potential benefits of and have favorable sentiments toward such tools. A recent ACM TechBrief cites a study out of the University of Queesland and KPMG Australia that found over 60% of people globally do not trust AI.

I'm honestly not sure what angle I want to take here - as someone interested and involved in technology ethics, as an expert on tool qualification who is also involved in build and buy decisions, as a member of the Stack Exchange community and a moderator on two Network sites. From all of these angles, I don't see things coming out of the company that demonstrate the ability to help developers with quality or help enterprises reduce risk. In fact, I see the opposite. I see decisions or thinking that is actively harmful to trusting not only the content on the Network, but making it more difficult to have organizations that I have more trust in build trustworthy tools.

And this goes back to needing a people-centric focus. Human people need to be at the heart of every decision. But it seems like trying to cram "AI" everywhere because it's a buzzword is what's really at the heart of company decision making. And that's going to lead to a lack of trust in the product and, more importantly, the data.

AIs will become another member of the community—and the community can decide the quality, accuracy, and value of their contributions.

No.

Check out the definitions in Merriam-Webster or on Wikipedia. You see words and phrases like "social unit", "group of living things", "shared socially significant characteristic", "people with common interests", "body of persons", "interacting population of various kinds of individuals (such as species)". Tools are not part of a community. The community is only the people.

I think it's wrong to ignore AI. It can unlock some new possibilities for how people interact with each other and artifacts they produce, where "artifacts" in the context of Stack Overflow and the Stack Exchange Network include questions, answers, comments, discussions, articles, chat messages.

People, however, must come first. And I see a potential glimmer of hope when you talk about onboarding and engaging the users - the people that generate and consume content - across the Network. However, this needs to take precedence over "the AI focus".

Developers need tools and resources to produce quality, safe, and secure products, while enterprises need to trust the tools and resources to not introduce risk to their business.

This is key.

Your own 2023 Developer Survey revealed that over 25% of developers do not trust the accuracy of the output of AI tools. Although large numbers of respondents do see potential benefits of and have favorable sentiments toward such tools. A recent ACM TechBrief cites a study out of the University of Queensland and KPMG Australia that found over 60% of people globally do not trust AI.

I'm honestly not sure what angle I want to take here - as someone interested and involved in technology ethics, as an expert on tool qualification who is also involved in build and buy decisions, as a member of the Stack Exchange community and a moderator on two Network sites. From all of these angles, I don't see things coming out of the company that demonstrate the ability to help developers with quality or help enterprises reduce risk. In fact, I see the opposite. I see decisions or thinking that is actively harmful to trusting not only the content on the Network, but making it more difficult to have organizations that I have more trust in build trustworthy tools.

And this goes back to needing a people-centric focus. Human people need to be at the heart of every decision. But it seems like trying to cram "AI" everywhere because it's a buzzword is what's really at the heart of company decision making. And that's going to lead to a lack of trust in the product and, more importantly, the data.

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Source Link
Thomas Owens
  • 116k
  • 4
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  • 47

AIs will become another member of the community—and the community can decide the quality, accuracy, and value of their contributions.

No.

Check out the definitions in Merriam-Webster or on Wikipedia. You see words and phrases like "social unit", "group of living things", "shared socially significant characteristic", "people with common interests", "body of persons", "interacting population of various kinds of individuals (such as species)". Tools are not part of a community. The community is only the people.

I think it's wrong to ignore AI. It can unlock some new possibilities for how people interact with each other and artifacts they produce, where "artifacts" in the context of Stack Overflow and the Stack Exchange Network include questions, answers, comments, discussions, articles, chat messages.

People, however, must come first. And I see a potential glimmer of hope when you talk about onboarding and engaging the users - the people that generate and consume content - across the Network. However, this needs to take precedence over "the AI focus".

Developers need tools and resources to produce quality, safe, and secure products, while enterprises need to trust the tools and resources to not introduce risk to their business.

This is key.

Your own 2023 Developer Survey revealed that over 25% of developers do not trust the accuracy of the output of AI tools. Although large numbers of respondents do see potential benefits of and have favorable sentiments toward such tools. A recent ACM TechBrief cites a study out of the University of Queesland and KPMG Australia that found over 60% of people globally do not trust AI.

I'm honestly not sure what angle I want to take here - as someone interested and involved in technology ethics, as an expert on tool qualification who is also involved in build and buy decisions, as a member of the Stack Exchange community and a moderator on two Network sites. From all of these angles, I don't see things coming out of the company that demonstrate the ability to help developers with quality or help enterprises reduce risk. In fact, I see the opposite. I see decisions or thinking that is actively harmful to trusting not only the content on the Network, but making it more difficult to have organizations that I have more trust in build trustworthy tools.

And this goes back to needing a people-centric focus. Human people need to be at the heart of every decision. But it seems like trying to cram "AI" everywhere because it's a marketing buzzword is what's really at the heart of company decision making. And that's going to lead to a lack of trust in the product and, more importantly, the data.

AIs will become another member of the community—and the community can decide the quality, accuracy, and value of their contributions.

No.

Check out the definitions in Merriam-Webster or on Wikipedia. You see words and phrases like "social unit", "group of living things", "shared socially significant characteristic", "people with common interests", "body of persons", "interacting population of various kinds of individuals (such as species)". Tools are not part of a community. The community is only the people.

I think it's wrong to ignore AI. It can unlock some new possibilities for how people interact with each other and artifacts they produce, where "artifacts" in the context of Stack Overflow and the Stack Exchange Network include questions, answers, comments, discussions, articles, chat messages.

People, however, must come first. And I see a potential glimmer of hope when you talk about onboarding and engaging the users - the people that generate and consume content - across the Network. However, this needs to take precedence over "the AI focus".

Developers need tools and resources to produce quality, safe, and secure products, while enterprises need to trust the tools and resources to not introduce risk to their business.

This is key.

Your own 2023 Developer Survey revealed that over 25% of developers do not trust the accuracy of the output of AI tools. Although large numbers of respondents do see potential benefits of and have favorable sentiments toward such tools.

I'm honestly not sure what angle I want to take here - as someone interested and involved in technology ethics, as an expert on tool qualification who is also involved in build and buy decisions, as a member of the Stack Exchange community and a moderator on two Network sites. From all of these angles, I don't see things coming out of the company that demonstrate the ability to help developers with quality or help enterprises reduce risk. In fact, I see the opposite. I see decisions or thinking that is actively harmful to trusting not only the content on the Network, but making it more difficult to have organizations that I have more trust in build trustworthy tools.

And this goes back to needing a people-centric focus. Human people need to be at the heart of every decision. But it seems like trying to cram "AI" everywhere because it's a marketing buzzword is what's really at the heart of company decision making. And that's going to lead to a lack of trust in the product and, more importantly, the data.

AIs will become another member of the community—and the community can decide the quality, accuracy, and value of their contributions.

No.

Check out the definitions in Merriam-Webster or on Wikipedia. You see words and phrases like "social unit", "group of living things", "shared socially significant characteristic", "people with common interests", "body of persons", "interacting population of various kinds of individuals (such as species)". Tools are not part of a community. The community is only the people.

I think it's wrong to ignore AI. It can unlock some new possibilities for how people interact with each other and artifacts they produce, where "artifacts" in the context of Stack Overflow and the Stack Exchange Network include questions, answers, comments, discussions, articles, chat messages.

People, however, must come first. And I see a potential glimmer of hope when you talk about onboarding and engaging the users - the people that generate and consume content - across the Network. However, this needs to take precedence over "the AI focus".

Developers need tools and resources to produce quality, safe, and secure products, while enterprises need to trust the tools and resources to not introduce risk to their business.

This is key.

Your own 2023 Developer Survey revealed that over 25% of developers do not trust the accuracy of the output of AI tools. Although large numbers of respondents do see potential benefits of and have favorable sentiments toward such tools. A recent ACM TechBrief cites a study out of the University of Queesland and KPMG Australia that found over 60% of people globally do not trust AI.

I'm honestly not sure what angle I want to take here - as someone interested and involved in technology ethics, as an expert on tool qualification who is also involved in build and buy decisions, as a member of the Stack Exchange community and a moderator on two Network sites. From all of these angles, I don't see things coming out of the company that demonstrate the ability to help developers with quality or help enterprises reduce risk. In fact, I see the opposite. I see decisions or thinking that is actively harmful to trusting not only the content on the Network, but making it more difficult to have organizations that I have more trust in build trustworthy tools.

And this goes back to needing a people-centric focus. Human people need to be at the heart of every decision. But it seems like trying to cram "AI" everywhere because it's a buzzword is what's really at the heart of company decision making. And that's going to lead to a lack of trust in the product and, more importantly, the data.

Source Link
Thomas Owens
  • 116k
  • 4
  • 35
  • 47

AIs will become another member of the community—and the community can decide the quality, accuracy, and value of their contributions.

No.

Check out the definitions in Merriam-Webster or on Wikipedia. You see words and phrases like "social unit", "group of living things", "shared socially significant characteristic", "people with common interests", "body of persons", "interacting population of various kinds of individuals (such as species)". Tools are not part of a community. The community is only the people.

I think it's wrong to ignore AI. It can unlock some new possibilities for how people interact with each other and artifacts they produce, where "artifacts" in the context of Stack Overflow and the Stack Exchange Network include questions, answers, comments, discussions, articles, chat messages.

People, however, must come first. And I see a potential glimmer of hope when you talk about onboarding and engaging the users - the people that generate and consume content - across the Network. However, this needs to take precedence over "the AI focus".

Developers need tools and resources to produce quality, safe, and secure products, while enterprises need to trust the tools and resources to not introduce risk to their business.

This is key.

Your own 2023 Developer Survey revealed that over 25% of developers do not trust the accuracy of the output of AI tools. Although large numbers of respondents do see potential benefits of and have favorable sentiments toward such tools.

I'm honestly not sure what angle I want to take here - as someone interested and involved in technology ethics, as an expert on tool qualification who is also involved in build and buy decisions, as a member of the Stack Exchange community and a moderator on two Network sites. From all of these angles, I don't see things coming out of the company that demonstrate the ability to help developers with quality or help enterprises reduce risk. In fact, I see the opposite. I see decisions or thinking that is actively harmful to trusting not only the content on the Network, but making it more difficult to have organizations that I have more trust in build trustworthy tools.

And this goes back to needing a people-centric focus. Human people need to be at the heart of every decision. But it seems like trying to cram "AI" everywhere because it's a marketing buzzword is what's really at the heart of company decision making. And that's going to lead to a lack of trust in the product and, more importantly, the data.