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Mar 28 at 21:51 comment added Kevin B Duplicate detection can definitely be improved by ML, but that's exactly the point i'm making... ML isn't a new thing that was invented in the past two years, they could have been using that for the past 10 to improve duplicate detection.
Mar 28 at 20:14 comment added NoDataDumpNoContribution Well how can I do else but describe a non-existing solution. It's all about planned features. Another thing where AI could help for example is duplicate detection. We have so many recognized duplicates, using some contrastive learning it might just be possible to identify duplicates to existing questions automatically. Again, this doesn't exist yet and may never exist or it may. Let's see what the company comes up with. My general guess would be that they think they can automatize (parts of) curation.
Mar 28 at 19:09 comment added Kevin B You're effectively describing a non-existing solution using a tool that literally can't do that. It's certainly possible some ML solution could eke out potential issues with a given post, similar to how the current ask wizard does so with rudimentary regex, but no solution that doesn't actually understand what the asker is asking for will be able to replace reviewers.
Mar 28 at 19:03 comment added Kevin B generating "helpful" comments based on past comments to different questions is just silly. At best it'll generate comments that would be helpful if not for being irrelevant to the question they're posted on.
Mar 28 at 19:01 comment added NoDataDumpNoContribution @KevinB Do you mean me? Yes LLMs could maybe be trained to give "helpful" comments. And other AI, could for example be used to classify a question (predict the final score, predict open/close) and then auto-close. This is not so complicated, it may well be just now developed by the company. We could simply wait and see what they mean by that.
Mar 28 at 18:58 comment added Kevin B if by AI you mean LLM's, they by design generate text based on existing text it was trained on, they don't curate content. If by AI you mean some non-existent general AI, then, well, it doesn't exist.
Mar 28 at 18:56 comment added TylerH @NoDataDumpNoContribution You can do that with people, or with non-"AI" code already. The company clearly isn't interested in addressing issues with questions before they are posted, otherwise we'd have regular expressions that block posting of questions that include things like "best practices" in the title or body. More effort would have been put into the ask question wizard. Ad infinitum.
Mar 28 at 18:48 comment added NoDataDumpNoContribution @TylerH "I don't see how AI is relevant at all to scaling a project like this." You could take all those questions that got closed and later reopened and train a generative AI to produce the comments that appeared below those questions as well as the close reasons as well as the close decision. Why should AI not be able to curate (in principle)? It's not totally out of the question.
Mar 28 at 9:41 comment added wizzwizz4 @KevinB To play marketer's advocate: just because the technology was known to some humans doesn't mean Stack Exchange was capable of deploying it two years ago.
Mar 27 at 19:05 comment added Andreas condemns Israel @Bella_Blue Would these things use generative AI, or something else?
Mar 27 at 17:25 comment added Kevin B So, things that definitely were possible before 2 years ago
Mar 27 at 17:22 comment added Bella_Blue StaffMod The first rule of Community Manager Club is that we do not over-promise, so let me say that what I am offering here is highly speculative. But two early proposals include a better means to detect duplicate questions, and methods to surface questions to appropriate subject-matter experts. However, these examples are not exhaustive.
Mar 27 at 14:36 comment added Zoe - Save the data dump Mod Inb4 formatting assistant v2
Mar 27 at 14:30 comment added Kevin B Exactly. I could see it being leveraged in the form of ML powered search or semantic search... but neither didn't exist 2 years ago. Neither did grammar correcting solutions or spell checking or code linting, etc.
Mar 27 at 14:29 comment added TylerH I don't see how AI is relevant at all to scaling a project like this. The only AI that has "come around" in the last two years is generative text large language models... we are not using AI to write questions (that are allowed on SO) or to review them. So... I have to say "huh?" to that blog post claim.
Mar 27 at 14:27 history answered Kevin B CC BY-SA 4.0