Timeline for What factors were considered for declining AI flag on Meta?
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
11 events
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Apr 16 at 10:22 | comment | added | TheMaster | @DalijaPrasnikar Good point. I can see at least one of those answers making the sarcastic point that it answers both ways and that it shouldn't be trusted. In that case, I think removing "comedic/ironic purposes" would be better. | |
Apr 16 at 10:18 | comment | added | Cerbrus | @TheMaster Again, there's no "set in stone" criteria. "This is judged on a case-by-case basis." This isn't "official policy" that you can then apply to other answers. These 2 answers were just deemed to be an exception. Nothing more than that. | |
Apr 16 at 10:16 | comment | added | Dalija Prasnikar Mod | Purpose of the answers was not merely fun, but also proving the point that AI should not be allowed on Stack Overflow. Those answers also satisfy one important requirement attribution. They explicitly quote AI generated content. | |
Apr 16 at 10:15 | comment | added | TheMaster | I'm asking the criteria for such exception. I'm asking for uniform impartial implementation of such exception. "Fun" clearly broke the rules. It is "black" and there's no question about it. You can't judge one way for one scenario and another way for the same scenario. Exception was made. You're saying "fun" and "age" were the reasons for this difference. Though I don't like it, if that's the official public policy made transparent by moderators, I'll accept it. | |
Apr 16 at 10:08 | comment | added | Cerbrus | Where there are rules, there will be exceptions. These 2 answers are an exception. That's not hypocritical. That's life, that's community, that's culture. | |
Apr 16 at 10:06 | comment | added | Cerbrus | I think it's presumptuous to think you know better than the moderator who locked those answers, all the other moderators who deleted other AI answers, and the thousands of users that upvoted those 2 answers. You're asking for a black-and-white interpretation of the rules. That's unrealistic. | |
Apr 16 at 10:02 | comment | added | TheMaster | The problem isn't that it is or isn't "fun" or whether "fun" is banned. The problem is if that "fun" breaks the rule(even the rule explicitly mentioned in the question), should a exception be made, if so, on what factors - on the age and that it is just "fun"? It's not presumptuous to think Meta which makes the rules should follow them even if it goes against their "fun" - Shouldn't Meta lead by example? "We hate fun" and we do remove "fun" content as noise in the main site. Isn't it hypocritical for me to link to that question to a new user, while the top answer explicitly breaks it? | |
Apr 16 at 9:53 | comment | added | Cerbrus | No. There's not a single hard rule about "fun". This is judged on a case-by-case basis. And frankly, it's incredibly presumptuous to flag answers that old, with that many upvotes, and expect them to be deleted. | |
Apr 16 at 9:50 | comment | added | TheMaster | In other words, if the purpose is "fun" and it is in "meta" and if it is one of the first few(age), it is allowed, even if it breaks some rules in the process. Is that correct? | |
Apr 16 at 8:16 | history | edited | Cerbrus | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
added 665 characters in body
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Apr 16 at 8:05 | history | answered | Cerbrus | CC BY-SA 4.0 |