It's been apparent for some time that Stack Overflow's goals are mostly unrelated to those of community members who want to build and curate a library of useful high-quality answers to various questions. So it's rare that any of the changes they make help with that. (wizzwizz4's answer on Stack Exchange is failing its community cites many examples of SO actively ignoring community feedback and making the site worse.)
But this appears to be crossing the line into actively opposing community moderation, forcing us to keep crap, rather than just be more polite while downvoting it, or making the close reasons less clear, or things like that which most of us can put up with. (Being polite actually is a good policy, even when it's likely the recipient rudely doesn't respect other people's time or the community they're posting in.)
I wasn't happy about many previous SO changes, but they never seemed like they'd make the site unusable for me personally, especially for the corners of it that I cared about and spend time caring for.
But this feels different. Previously they were mostly just providing a platform for the community to moderate as we saw fit, without any really onerous restrictions. (At least none that I knew of, but I'm not a moderator and maybe have missed some discussions of previous policies that restricted how moderators could moderate. Update: thanks @Cody Gray♦ for confirming that this is the first time SO has really tied the hands of moderators' use of their tools.)
This seems to me like the difference between a newspaper owner having shoddy offices or something vs. interfering with the editors and journalists. I know SO's community and elected moderators didn't have the equivalent of editorial independence on the platform provided by SO even before this, so it's not a perfect analogy. I'm just trying convey that this feels like a major heavy-handed new level of interference, of the same level of significance as the owners of a newspaper telling the editors what they can and can't publish.
It's their platform so they can make rules like this, but we don't have to keep using it.
This is the first time I've seen a policy from SO that made me think the site has finally gone fully off the rails and that I should be spending my time contributing to a different Q&A site.
Previously, after events like Monica-gate and the surrounding dishonesty by Stack Overflow, I realized there were big problems. But I expected the SO community would still survive, or at worst be in for a death by a thousand cuts from short-sighted profit-driven policies aimed at boosting clicks and site traffic (like new question posts) in the short run, not helping people find answers without having to bother other humans by posting new questions. I didn't expect such blatant active interference with obviously-useful moderator activity trying to hold the site together and keep it useful despite the corporate policies that encourage crap to get posted with as small a barrier to entry as possible, whether or not it will be well received.
This is a new angle of attack, acting in favour of those making posts most of the community doesn't want, so they'll be able to make more of them. This is unacceptable. What's next, removing the posting rate limits for low-rep users whose posts are downvoted?
Being dishonest about the actual policy is not a new low for Stack Overflow; IIRC they previously lied about discussions with Monica before their stupendously poorly-timed banning of her. But it certainly doesn't help matters that they've reportedly told moderators they can't moderate in much more absolute terms than it sounds like from reading the policy announcement (What is the network policy regarding AI Generated content?) and the claimed justifications.
One might hope that they'd learned their lesson about honesty from the Monica incident which destroyed huge amounts of community goodwill, and made many moderators re-evaluate what they were contributing their time towards. But it seems they haven't.
The only hope I have for the situation is that there was some miscommunication with what they meant, like that moderators can still moderate posts that are obviously churned out by clueless and/or selfish users who post AI-generated garbage without having the expertise to check it carefully, or without taking the time to actually do so. (i.e. the problem posts that were the reason behind the ChatGPT ban which is still in force. The usage pattern that's the reason we can't have nice things, i.e. AI help for idea generation and/or better wording of explanations, for users who do understand the entire post they end up posting.)
Or if not miscommunication, then that SO quickly changes this bad policy to still allow moderators to use their human judgement when enforcing the ChatGPT ban and suspending users who waste everyone's time by posting AI output. (Especially unchecked AI output. I don't have any inherent objection to posts where people used ChatGPT as part of their process of creating it, as long as the final result is 100% good. But I accept that we need the total ban because there's no reasonably time-efficient way to distinguish such posts from the flood of unchecked crap, compared to how much time it takes people to generate such answers. Perhaps it could work to allow people to claim that the idea or code was AI-generated, but that they've understood all of what it did. With some kind of bigger penalty than a downvote if there's solid evidence they didn't actually make a good-faith effort to do what they claimed.)
If not changed, this current policy of not being able to suspend users flood-posting AI output will quickly have strong negative effects for the overall quality of answers on SO. And regardless of exactly how big the impact is, it's simply not ok for Stack Overflow to stop the moderators from moderating.