Question(s) first: how should situations like these be dealt with? How does a certain stance affect the community? How does it affect the corporation's ability to make money?
I've recently encountered a user who clearly uses GenAI, probably straight-up ChatGPT, to author answers and even comments. The user admits this, when asked, but there are no disclaimers anywhere.
One example of a comment (the subject was image processing):
The context of the images to be processed is crucial in determining the best technical approach to adopt.
(which was posted after a regular gave a to-the-point comment that basically solved the issue, unless OP had some undisclosed constraints to add)
The user elaborates when their use of GenAI questioned:
[...] These models serve not only to translate between languages but also as a compensatory tool in cases of language disorders. [...]
The writing style is that of ChatGPT: low on content/meaning/substance, high on pomp and truisms, sounding authoritative, passive voice, impersonal, abstract rather than concrete, prone to repeating parts of the prompt. The kind that pings techies' bullshit meters, which have been finely calibrated on GenAI content over the past year or so.
Further, I think this user's pre-ChatGPT writing was just fine, albeit strongly reading like English-as-a-second-language (ESL), with strong signs of the native language shining through. Maybe it's dyslexia or a manual handicap, but I don't think so. Supposing there is a disorder of any kind, and supposing it warranted compensation by technical means, I don't think it warrants subjecting us to current-generation GenAI. At the very least, the model needs to be beaten into shape so it stops acting like... it does.
I think SO needs to get ahead of this claim. If it were to be accepted, a whole lot of rep hunters would deploy this claim as an excuse to keep flooding us with GenAI-excreted "content" that we have to sift through and combat.