This isn't a proposal - I'm just wondering how this contradiction will be resolved and starting a discussion on it.
Currently, Generative AI is banned on Stack Overflow. The SO corporate office unilaterally decreed that moderators are severely restricted in how they enforce this ban (or similar bans on other stacks), and essentially can make no inferences about where the text of a post originated - however, one must assume from the text of SO's mod-restraining policy that a user simply admitting that they used generative AI would still be a sanctionable offense. This is based on the public version of the policy, since we as users don't know what was in the (apparently divergent) policy conveyed to moderators in private.
Given that the experimental AI formatting assistant is a first party feature, one would assume that users utilizing it would discuss it openly (assuming SO actually rolls it out.) It's easy to imagine a user responding to a comment asking for clarification on their wording, commenting something along the lines of "the formatter changed my wording, what I really meant was [X]." The current implementation of the formatting assistant does not hide that it is powered by generative AI, it even presents the text "AI suggested edits for your question."
It would seem that moderators would be well within policy to ban these users, as they have admitted to knowingly violating the generative AI ban, and SO corporate has not restrained mods from taking users at their word that they've used generative AI. SO corporate has "asked moderators to apply a very strict standard of evidence to determining whether a post is AI-authored when deciding to suspend a user. This standard of evidence excludes the use of moderators' best guesses based on users' writing styles and behavioral indicators," but a confession is not a guess whatsoever.