I have several pending flags going back to mid-August that are all pending. They are all for ChatGPT generated content which is perhaps why they are yet to be dealt with.
Is this a fallout of the recent(ish) strike action?
I have several pending flags going back to mid-August that are all pending. They are all for ChatGPT generated content which is perhaps why they are yet to be dealt with.
Is this a fallout of the recent(ish) strike action?
Is this a fallout of the recent(ish) strike action?
To some extent, but there's a lot more at play here. I do think we probably owe you (and the other flaggers) some explanation of what's going on.
Prior to the strike, we actually had the queue decently in hand. There was a good mix of moderators who were handling lots and lots of flags. The call-up was, by all accounts, a true success.
The strike hurt all that. Active mods slowed down long before the strike itself hit. The strike itself dragged on for nearly 2 months. Mod activity has not returned to anywhere near pre-strike levels. Recent events have not helped that sentiment.
We will have to run an election at some point. There's been discussion on that, but we wanted to let the strike things settle, to see if some mods returned and/or resigned. With the SE staff shakeup, that's left things unsettled even more (we have less staff to work with, and it's still not clear who does what with less folks to do it). I expect things will settle out, but there's just not much in the area of moderator drive right now.
Let's talk about the real elephant in the room: AI policy. It was central to the strike but the initial resolution wasn't clear
Stack Exchange has agreed to allow the removal of content based on a single strong indicator of GPT usage, or on several weaker indicators. Effective immediately, the interim standards that we have agreed on will serve as policy until a more permanent policy is established with the help of the broader community, including determining further heuristics and what category they will fall into. Moderation should follow the standard escalation for suspensions, beginning with a warning and then escalating suspensions if infractions continue.
There's been progress between SE and the community on making some clear reasoning to deal with AI posts, but there's also a general sense that there's a lot more to enforcement of AI than before, and we have to not only navigate the belief of users that there are AI posts being made, but navigate these more difficult waters. Because of that, AI flags (which weren't that easy to handle before) are now even more cumbersome to handle.
Unlike plagiarism, I don't think it's practical to request a specific flag at this time. But the strike left us a giant pile of flags and the lion's share of them are AI related
Of that number, I'd estimate 90-95% are AI related. We are still removing AI content and warning users when it's clear they're doing so. But it's going to take time (and likely some new mods) to clear the log entirely.
We're handling flags to the best extent of our volunteer moderator force. They are not being ignored. But there's a lot of these flags hanging out there after months of strike-induced buildup. It's going to take time. After the AI policy is hardened up, and the staff is clearer on who does what, hopefully some folks will step up and volunteer to help with it.