Timeline for The new AI search feature's "Save as Q&A" button is in blatant violation of the community's ban on generative AI
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
11 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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Oct 2 at 20:44 | comment | added | Security Hound | @herrstrietzel - Money. SE can be paid money for data to train AI, why not utilize that trained AI, I get it. But it doesn’t mean that any contribution generated by AI will be helpful, and until I see a single helpful contribution by AI I will continue to downvote, vote to delete, and flag AI generated content. | |
Oct 2 at 2:32 | comment | added | herrstrietzel | This still begs the question of why SE was putting so much effort into developing a GPT-like search, when the platform's "unique selling point" is the collection of trustworthy expertise (admittedly, far too often of poor quality - that's where an AI could help, as well as the terrible auto-detection of related posts). Probably not a violation, but at least it's highly contradictory and not comprehensible to users. Also, how could this feature possibly attract new members to SO, as it completely undermines the concept of participation - no new questions, no new answers. | |
Oct 1 at 19:17 | comment | added | TylerH | Except this isn't SOfT. It's SO. While some codebase may be shared, code for this should not be. Anything AI-related should be in a separate module loaded specially for SOfT since we don't want AI content on our site. | |
Oct 1 at 19:03 | comment | added | Zoe - Save the data dump Mod | @KarlKnechtel Which is correct. What companies do with the private information on their own teams is not our problem, and doesn't affect the Q&A that actually matters for knowledge sharing | |
Oct 1 at 18:41 | comment | added | Karl Knechtel | @TylerH presumably they figure the ban doesn't apply to SOfT. | |
Oct 1 at 18:34 | comment | added | Kevin B | I don't recall any such test, The OverflowAI search feature was quite a bit different from this. | |
Oct 1 at 16:12 | comment | added | Augusto Vasques | @zcoop98, I didn't suggest turning the feature on or off by user. I was thinking about the feature end point being available even if not documented. | |
Oct 1 at 15:57 | comment | added | zcoop98 | @Augusto I'm certainly not staff, but that's generally not how turning deployed platform features on or off works. Their system will look to their own configuration setup to determine whether a feature is enabled or not– I can't think of anything an end-user could do to disrupt that if it's set up correctly. | |
Oct 1 at 15:44 | comment | added | Augusto Vasques | Is there any risk of a more enthusiastic user preparing an HTTP request that triggers the feature? | |
Oct 1 at 15:27 | comment | added | TylerH | "To be clear, there are no current plans to release this on the public platform, even in the future" Given this claim, and the fact it is a feature that completely violates a site-wide rule banning AI content, maybe the code should be entirely removed from the codebase, then? There is no scenario where such a feature can co-exist while said site-wide rule is in place. | |
Oct 1 at 14:33 | history | answered | Cesar MStaffMod | CC BY-SA 4.0 |