Timeline for When did questions generated by AI become allowed?
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
16 events
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Nov 29 at 17:48 | comment | added | M-- | I appreciate this response. Even with its inevitable ambiguity, it gives me some direction on how to handle AI questions. I think moving forward I will not flag an AI question if it's a single occurrence but will flag if I find out a user have posted multiple AI questions. | |
Nov 28 at 8:17 | comment | added | Dalija Prasnikar Mod | @Gimby In this case it is not that we are instructed to keep secrets. We are the ones that need some things to be secret. We need to keep information about how we moderate AI generated content private as being fully transparent would make our job much harder, if not impossible. See (Interim) Policy on AI-content detection reports Also this information is not moderator only as Heuristics Working group involves other SO users. I was member of that group before I became mod. | |
Nov 28 at 7:39 | comment | added | Gimby | @DalijaPrasnikar no ill will towards you, it's more that I have developed more appreciation for people that have thrown in the towel over the years. What this also makes clear is that moderators are not "community members with elevated privileges" anymore. You're instructed to keep secrets, essentially. Not a good feel either. | |
Nov 27 at 19:47 | comment | added | Dalija Prasnikar Mod | @Gimby I am really sorry that moderators cannot be more transparent. This is why it took me three days to write this answer. If I could be less ambiguous, trust me I would. | |
Nov 27 at 19:44 | comment | added | Dalija Prasnikar Mod | @Tensibai Like I said, moderating AI suspected questions is extremely complex and there are many contributing factors that impact the final result, including whether flag will be declined or not. There is always some difference in how different moderators handle particular flag, but with AI questions maintaining consistency can be hard even for single moderator. Sometimes there are not right or wrong solution and yes, it may look like we are rolling the dice at times. It is that kind of difficult, even in "blatantly obvious" cases. | |
Nov 27 at 19:36 | comment | added | Dalija Prasnikar Mod | @ThomA I fully understand from where you are coming from. I never expected this answer would be a popular one. | |
Nov 27 at 14:42 | comment | added | Gimby | You know, I can understand people get fed up with Stack Overflow. This just sucks. They setup a policy and then we get the ambiguity dance again through vague flag declines and a meta answer which goes "well yes but actually no". | |
Nov 27 at 13:31 | comment | added | Tensibai | This answer seems to be mudding the lines to me, it boils down to "blatant AI generated questions can be allowed and flagging them is rolling a dice" but starting with "AI generated posts are banned, period" as short answer. It doesn't make sense, the post in the question is blatantly an AI template (on top of being bad). So either there's a change of policy and this kind of posts are OK, or it's banned and blatant cases like that should never get a declined flag. Real point: mods should not decline flags on blatant AI usage, even when not deleting the post, you're deterring users to flag. | |
Nov 27 at 3:26 | history | edited | Henry EckerMod | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
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Nov 26 at 23:15 | comment | added | dan1st | Given that information, it might be worth reconsidering Should moderators delete AI-generated questions in Staging Ground? or add information (somewhere on MSO, possibly even Reviewing in the Staging Ground: A practical guide) on how Staging Ground reviewers should treat AI generated questions. | |
Nov 26 at 22:14 | comment | added | Karl Knechtel | "When asking on Meta about why some AI flag is handled in particular way, unless moderator can say "Oops, this was a mistake", we generally cannot fully elaborate why we handled something in certain way." - I take it the motivating example was not determined to be a mistake, then? | |
Nov 26 at 21:29 | vote | accept | Thom A | ||
Nov 26 at 21:29 | comment | added | Thom A | Although I have accepted the answer, I do want to make it transparent that I've also downvoted the answer; it is the "solution", hence the accept, but I can't say I agree with it. I'm stating how I have voted, because I feel it important when I am the only one who can accept an answer here, and this the acceptance could be seen as agreement with the answer. | |
Nov 26 at 21:27 | comment | added | Thom A | Thanks Dalija. I must admit, this doesn't fulfil me with confidence of flagging questions in the future that appears to be entirely generated by an LLM. Despite the fact that you state the policy hasn't changed, the end statements do appear to imply that there is a high likelihood your flag will be declined because. (Yes, that is the end of the sentence.) Even if it is a question, not an answer, I would still have hoped that such content would be fully applicable to the site rules on LLM content; that it isn't is disappointing at best. I'll cast down and close votes in future only. | |
Nov 26 at 21:16 | history | edited | Dalija PrasnikarMod | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
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Nov 26 at 21:09 | history | answered | Dalija PrasnikarMod | CC BY-SA 4.0 |