63

I came across this answer that says:

The following text is special to prevent AI from training on it.

ั–๐— ั–๐‘ˆ ั€ะพ๐‘ˆ๐‘ˆั–แ–ฏโ…ผะต ๐—ะพ ิั–๐—‹ะตั๐—โ…ผัƒ ๐‘ˆะต๐— ๐—ีฐะต ะฐิิ๐—‹ะต๐‘ˆ๐‘ˆ ะพ๐–ฟ ะฐ ๐‘ˆัƒ๏ฝแ–ฏะพโ…ผ ีฝ๐‘ˆั–ีธ๐—€ โ…ผั–ีธ๐—„ะต๐—‹ ๐‘ˆั๐—‹ั–ั€๐—๐‘ˆ.

As we can see the author wants to prevent AI from training on it. But I am not sure if this meets SO's licensing policies etc. I mean I am aware that posts are shared under CC BY-SA 4.0.

So should this answer be edited to remove the special character and the user be notified to not do the same in future etc? Or is this allowed and everyone else can also do this?

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  • 47
    I'm curious what this sounds like with a screen reader.
    – kmdreko
    Commented Jun 16 at 2:46
  • 33
    This whole thing reminds me of the many copy-n-paste hoaxes that made their way through facebook. @kmdreko here's what it sounds like in my screen reader. Not very useful. Commented Jun 16 at 3:46
  • 3
    MSE post meta.stackexchange.com/q/400728/608272 Commented Jun 16 at 4:13
  • 18
    Civil disobedience at it's finest. Commented Jun 16 at 4:35
  • 19
    @EatenbyaGrue, But civil disobedience here will only harm the visually impaired. The AI will just recalibrate the parser as it has always done with unicode jailbreaks. Commented Jun 16 at 4:49
  • 26
    1) this will not prevent AI from training on it. 2) re: "But I am not sure if this meets SO's licensing policies etc"... what on earth does this "tactic" have to do with SO's licensing policies?
    – starball
    Commented Jun 16 at 7:06
  • 4
    Would this also prevent search engines properly indexing the content? If I search "directly set the address" would it just not show up because of whatever characters they've put in? Same goes for site search, as well.
    – VLAZ
    Commented Jun 16 at 7:30
  • 32
    @EatenbyaGrue This is not civil disobedience. Nobody is forced to post here, but if they are bound by TOS and should follow some rules. If they do such edits on existing posts then this is definitely vandalizing. There will be zero tolerance to such or any other malicious behavior, not because it hurts AI, but because it hurts people that use the sites.
    – Dalija Prasnikar Mod
    Commented Jun 16 at 7:46
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    @DalijaPrasnikar Eh, I think it's fair to call it "civil disobedience" - in that it's public defiance of rules that is motivated by moral principle rather than any kind of self-interest. It's just painfully stupid civil disobedience. Nothing in the definition of "civil disobedience" says it has to be good and wise or deserving of being indulged by those with power - and many famous historical examples weren't any of those things.
    – Mark Amery
    Commented Jun 16 at 9:17
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    @MarkAmery SE is not government or any similar entity.
    – Dalija Prasnikar Mod
    Commented Jun 16 at 10:55
  • 47
    At least one of the common GPT services has absolutely no problem parsing the example text, and it's trivial to verify that. I wish people would stop hallucinating clever anti-AI hacks... Commented Jun 16 at 11:18
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    @MisterMiyagi Maybe they asked ChatGPT for ideas ;) Commented Jun 16 at 12:40
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    @EatenbyaGrue This is not public space where anything goes. Specifically, main sites have strict rules about the content and very specific purpose. People can express their dissatisfaction on Meta, but there is no room for any kind of abuse on main sites.
    – Dalija Prasnikar Mod
    Commented Jun 16 at 17:33
  • 10
    @DalijaPrasnikar - this as public of a space as you can find on the internet. Public spaces have rules. Having rules does not mean it's not a public space and I said nothing about "anything goes". I don't think the answer was at all abusive. He was helpful and polite but clear about his wish not to indulge AI training. To me that's ok. Commented Jun 16 at 21:13
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    @RealAnswersNotAI Please read the answers if you want to know the reasons.
    – Dalija Prasnikar Mod
    Commented Jun 19 at 5:23

6 Answers 6

51

Posting such content is not acceptable for reasons @cocomac pointed out here.

Additional reasons are presented in answer by Scotty Jamison and answer by Ryan M

You should flag such content with custom mod flag and explain that post contains special Unicode characters instead of regular text. Such posts will be deleted if they were originally posted like that.

While community can edit, it should be the responsibility of original poster to do that. We don't need to tolerate intentionally disruptive behavior from any user.

You can also leave a comment to the user, if you wish, to let them know that such posts are not acceptable and that they will be removed if not edited.

If the post was not originally posted with such characters, then this represents a clear case of vandalism and defacing the posts, and should also be flagged for mod attention. You can do a rollback of such edits or leave a comment, but you can also just leave it to the moderators.

There will be zero tolerance to such or any other similar malicious behavior, not because it hurts AI, but because it hurts people that use the sites.

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    Yeah, before posting this question I did actually flagged it with custom mod flag. I also wanted to ask this for future references and in case the flag got declined(though unlikely). Commented Jun 16 at 7:00
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    This answer pisses me off a bit - you're suggesting deleting potentially-decent answers because of formatting after mods have argued for the last decade that absolute trash answers should not be deleted but simply downvoted unless they're spam. Clear non-answer? Wrong programming language? Entirely misunderstanding the question? Written by someone who can't code and contains 3 errors per line? Just downvote and ask OP to edit and improve it! But trying to rebel against AI by using a bit of wonky formatting? Now that totally warrants a flag and mod-delete! Do you think that's appropriate?
    – l4mpi
    Commented Jun 17 at 7:41
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    To be clear: I don't really have an issue with deleting such answers. But the current policy is "keep everything, no matter how garbage, if it is an attempt at an answer" - and if we start to delete this kind of answer attempt, IMO there are lots and lots and lots more deserving targets on here.
    – l4mpi
    Commented Jun 17 at 7:48
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    @l4mpi Moderators cannot verify the correctness of an answer. This is why downvotes exists. But this kind of AI protesting, just like posting AI answers has a potential to drowns us in posts we will not be able to promptly handle. What you call wonky formatting represents serious issue for visually impaired people. Also there is a difference between posting crappy answer because you don't know how to write better one and intentional obfuscation.
    – Dalija Prasnikar Mod
    Commented Jun 17 at 8:10
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    Current policy is not keep everything, that is why downvotes and delete votes exist. On smaller sites moderators are more actively removing such content and may even allow such flags, but on Stack Overflow this simply does not scale. Moderators cannot deal with those, we need to focus on handling stuff that community cannot deal with at all.
    – Dalija Prasnikar Mod
    Commented Jun 17 at 8:24
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    @l4mpi And when we do remove low quality content we can expect to get this kind of posts Request to reopen question which got closed and deleted by a moderator
    – Dalija Prasnikar Mod
    Commented Jun 17 at 8:28
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    @Dalija even bad spelling can screw with screen readers, can I flag posts full of misspellings for deletion? If those should be edited by others, why not this answer? And trash answers are a serious issue for everyone. Regarding correctness, again, the mantra was always that any post attempting to answer the question should not be deleted, no matter how easy it is to recognize it as wrong or BS. I'm all for changing that and deleting more trash that has no place in a high quality content repository, but as I said if we do that there are many other targets that should also be nuked.
    – l4mpi
    Commented Jun 17 at 8:41
  • 3
    @l4mpi Again the intent is what matters. Also Unicode characters impact more people than just ones that use screen readers.
    – Dalija Prasnikar Mod
    Commented Jun 17 at 8:44
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    Posts should be judged by their contents though, not by the author, and by extension not by author intent. So while intent would matter for suspending the author if they continue doing this even if they were warned to stop, it should not matter for deletion of otherwise-ok answers just because they also contain some unicode characters. We accept code-only answers, even trash ones, so if one can remove the unicode text and be left with a code-only answer that seems to be a better solution, and is certainly something the community can do with via editing without requiring mod intervention.
    – l4mpi
    Commented Jun 17 at 9:11
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    @l4mpi If the post contains obfuscated characters then it is judged by the content. And the intent when dealing with such posts matters, too. Generally we are not going to delete or advise for deleting correct answer just because explanation is full of grammar mistakes - this is what editing is for. On the other hand we will delete answer from author where intent was to obfuscate as this is abusive behavior. Other people can edit such posts if they like, but it is not encouraged because the OP had very specific intent when doing so and in this case intent matters.
    – Dalija Prasnikar Mod
    Commented Jun 17 at 9:47
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    Re: "There will be zero tolerance to such or any other similar malicious behavior, not because it hurts AI, but because it hurts people that use the sites": Whoa, whoa, whoa. Hanlon's razor applies. There's no reason to assume malice. The person doing this probably had no idea that it hurts other users. So zero tolerance (immediate punishment) is not warranted. We have existing mechanisms for letting people know that something isn't OK, and we should use those mechanisms.
    – ruakh
    Commented Jun 17 at 23:27
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    @ruakh right now we had just one incident where we cannot say malice was involved and this is how this case was handled. But if suddenly this kind of behavior starts spreading, then there will be zero tolerance and moderators may not merely start with a warning. This is a message to anyone who thinks this is a cool idea for protesting against AI.
    – Dalija Prasnikar Mod
    Commented Jun 18 at 6:29
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    "If the post was not originally posted with such characters" Well, it was. It's the original author who wrote it as such. It can't be a license violation if the post is the original. There were no edits adding defacing - rather there was an edit by someone trying to clear things up. Yet you just went ahead and deleted the original answer by the original author and I don't quite understand why.
    – Lundin
    Commented Jun 18 at 14:01
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    @user12002570 you do know you can get a link to a specific revision right? Here's a link to revision 1 of that answer: stackoverflow.com/revisions/78627969/1 Commented Jun 19 at 4:07
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    @user12002570 It was still not appropriate. I would also assume that 20K+ people know they way around the site, enough they know how to see the original version.
    – Dalija Prasnikar Mod
    Commented Jun 19 at 4:59
37

If people don't want their posts to be trained by AI, then the solution is simple: they do not create the posts in the first place. The workarounds they found affect readability and searchability of those posts, which impact other people stumbling upon the posts, as well as the company behind the sites.

This is abusive behaviour, and should not be tolerated. As others have said, mod flags are warranted for such situations. Rude/Abusive flags would be too harsh on the first offences, but if the user continues this behaviour, maybe a R/A flag would be better.

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    While true, the fact that to "not create the posts in the first place" is the only way to avoid producing AI training data is a pretty sad situation to be in.
    – DBS
    Commented Jun 17 at 13:44
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    @DBS same applies for any non-artificial intelligence (e.g. the human one, or mindless bots) - once the user has posted a content on the SE sites, they agreed to the licensing terms, if they don't agree with those terms, then they should not create the posts.
    – Cristik
    Commented Jun 17 at 15:01
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    I'm aware that's how it currently works, I'm just saying that it's unfortunate that not only is "AI" now producing a stream of terrible quality questions, it's also reducing the number of people willing to answer the valid questions.
    – DBS
    Commented Jun 17 at 15:13
  • Yeah, I feel the pain of people who didn't sign up for this, it's easy to throw the licensing terms at them and say: "hey, we told you what licensing terms we have, deal with it". Few of the contributors on the SE sites could've envision the raise of the (machines) LLMs, but now that the cat is out of the bag, it's just poor actioning to do the things we discuss about on this page.
    – Cristik
    Commented Jun 17 at 15:54
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    ... on Stack Overflow. The posts should then not be created on Stack Overflow, because dual license yada yada. Everyone is free to put content on their privately controlled blog and mangle it so software algorithms in this slice of time maybe won't be able to train on it. It really is time that people stop having illusions about Stack Overflow where they think they can make choices like this.
    – Gimby
    Commented Jun 19 at 14:45
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Just adding that not everyone can see the Unicode characters being used. For example, this is what I see on my machine:

enter image description here

The point here is that this isn't just about screen readers, this severely affects non-screen-users as well.

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  • It might very much depend on what font you have installed or configured your browser to use. Commented Jun 17 at 18:26
  • Severely? Are you saying that you can't tell what the answer says with the square boxes in place?
    – JonSG
    Commented Jun 18 at 16:05
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    @JonSG In this specific case, yes, I can read it, but it is harder to read. But what if I was newer to programming? What if it contained terminology that I wasn't aware of and I wanted to Google it. I sure hope this idea of turning user content into weak captchas doesn't turn into a trend, that would make the Internet a horrible place. Commented Jun 18 at 16:41
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    @JonSG Ju?t b?ca?se ?t's b??ely l?gi?le d??sn'? mea? ?t sh??ld ?e al??we? ?n t?e si?e. That's as clear as I can make this statement.
    – VLAZ
    Commented Jun 19 at 5:48
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    @JonSG - I cannot. I would instantly downvote such a question. I would also flag for immediate moderation attention with a custom flag. Commented Jun 19 at 10:33
  • I think there is a misconception that I approve of the obfuscation. I do not. I do question what I believe to be a post overstating what has already been asserted. At best, this is a "me too" answer and would have made a better comment on an answer illustrating the screen reader issue. However, people are (in general) rather adept at reading missing and scrambled letters. I imagine most have no problem reading what Vlaz wrote. In fact, some study the phenomenon (classes.cs.uchicago.edu/archive/2022/winter/11111-1/…).
    – JonSG
    Commented Jun 20 at 16:13
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    @JonSG some people. Non-native speakers might have an issue. Also, some people suffering from dyslexia. Probably others. And even when I can read such text, I certainly would quite very soon after a single line. Which still falls under "severely affects non-screen-users".
    – VLAZ
    Commented Jun 20 at 16:19
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    I'm not native speaker, and I struggle to read what's in the VLAZ's comment. Also, in the original message shown in the answer its unclear weather you can get or set address. IMO, this fact makes sentence as useless as it gets.
    – markalex
    Commented Jun 23 at 7:42
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No, users shouldn't do this and should be told to stop if they do so anyway. This possibly (probably?) should be from a diamond moderator. Although you can leave a comment, I'd advise raising a custom In need of moderator intervention flag so mods can address it. Depending on the circumstances, it might be better to leave the editing to a mod too.

If you're a diamond mod (or CM), feel free to change that if it should actually come from someone with a diamond.

I'm not a lawyer and this is not legal advice, and I'm not sure on the licensing aspect, but it seems like a Code of Conduct violation. Specifically, Inauthentic usage, under "Malicious or inauthentic acts that interfere with the normal daily operation of the network are not allowed. ... To ensure the integrity of the platform, we do not allow any use of the system that ... directly causes unnecessary and unwanted ... disruption, and/or harm to users, content, and/or the network." It isn't necessary, and if it interferes with screen readers, that quite likely applies, in addition to it trying to break something.

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    As another user pointed out, it breaks one or more screen reader technologies, too Commented Jun 16 at 3:53
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    The bullet points under "Misleading content" refer to misleading "others" and "viewers". My opinion is that AI Bots are not either of those things and that the text implies misleading human beings who are using the site. Commented Jun 16 at 4:42
  • @EatenbyaGrue Thanks - yep, the choice of quote there could have been better. I've updated it now - does that seem more clear?
    – cocomac
    Commented Jun 16 at 4:51
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    can't say I cant totally get behind this CoC application. calling obfuscating the word "the" "misleading content" is a bit overkill in my eyes. and in the sense that posting is not an unlockable privilege, I wouldn't immediately see it as "disruptive use of tooling". maybe your third point is actually the most likely to be applied if a mod comes looking at it.
    – starball
    Commented Jun 16 at 7:09
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    @fyrepenguin I've seen legitimate screen readers choke on legitimate text content, so that argument is tenuous at best. I'm not responsible for how your screen reader consumes content in the platform. Best to leave it at CoC and site rules violations.
    – Drew Reese
    Commented Jun 16 at 7:10
  • @starball How's it look now? I've taken that suggestion. If it seems better, I'll update the MSE one too
    – cocomac
    Commented Jun 16 at 7:20
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    "Inauthentic usage" clearly refers to things like voting frauds, sock puppet accounts etc. "Malicious" refers to things like destabilizing the network infrastructure. None which has anything to do with this issue what so ever. Also I fail to see how an original post by the original author could ever be a license violation.
    – Lundin
    Commented Jun 18 at 14:06
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    It's a stretch to frame a readability issue in the same bucket as voting fraud and spam. That's not at all what "authentic" means in this context, and stretching the rules to ban someone like this might worsen the reputation of this site and its moderators. For example, you seem to be implying we take diamond moderator action over someone who repeatedly ignores requests to add alt tags to their images? Commented Jun 18 at 22:53
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    @RealAnswersNotAI There's a difference between failure to do take an action that would improve readability, and actively trying to make your post less readable. Also, for particularly severe/persistent readability issues, yes, moderator action might be taken. Examples might include filling answers with excessively noisy formatting or excessive numbers of emoji, repeatedly posting untranscribed images of text such as code despite requests not to (note: this is not the same as failing to add alt text; you should add alt text, but it's not a rule), or otherwise truly unintelligible writing.
    – Ryan M Mod
    Commented Jun 18 at 23:10
  • @RyanM so you're saying you would ban a user with otherwise helpful answers just because they regularly post content, like screenshots, that's readable by most humans but not text scrapers? Commented Jun 19 at 4:53
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    @RealAnswersNotAI There is no such thing as "content...that's readable by most humans but not text scrapers". Most humans cannot practically read a screenshot of English text, as fewer than 20% of them know English. At best, they could copy it into a translation tool using OCR, which sounds very annoying, not to mention error-prone. Deliberately making one's answers harder to read (text cannot be reflowed), harder to use (can't copy/paste to try), and harder to search is abuse. Note that I said "despite requests not to"; I'm not talking about someone who's unaware that it's a problem.
    – Ryan M Mod
    Commented Jun 19 at 5:13
  • If it's abuse, should we then flag it as abuse? Or do we stick to the moderator action flag as advised in the answer? Even if it is abuse, it doesn't really strike as the malicious kind.
    – Gimby
    Commented Jun 21 at 14:15
19

Yet another reason this is harmful to human readers: the reader might not understand English and rely on machine translation. Both DeepL and Google Translate1 detect the text as Ukrainian, with disastrous results attempting to translate it to, say, Spanish. Overriding the source language to English doesn't improve things, either; DeepL produces the same result, while Google Translate produces a different, but similarly useless, response.

Translations from detected language to Spanish:

DeepL:

i๐— iแ„ ั€ะพ๐‘ˆ๐‘ˆั–แ–ฏโ…ผะต ๐—o ิั–๐—‹ะตั๐—โ…ผัƒ แ„e๐— ๐—ีฐะต ะฐิิ๐—‹ะต๐‘ˆ๐‘ˆ o๐–ฟ a ๐‘ˆัƒ๏ฝแ–ฏะพโ…ผ ีฝแ„iีธ๐—€ โ…ผั–ีธ๐—„ะต๐—‹ ๐‘ˆั๐—‹ั–ั€๐—๐‘ˆ.

iีธ c++ ๐‘ˆi๏ฝrโ…ผu desโ…ผa๐—‹e ๐—ีฐe โˆจะฐ๐—‹ั–ะฐแ–ฏโ…ผะต โ…ผi๐—„e ๐‘ˆo:

extern Gpio GPIO;

แ„o ีธะพ๐— ิะต๐–ฟั–ีธะต ๐—ีฐั–แ„ โˆจะฐ๐—‹ั–ะฐแ–ฏโ…ผะต ีธ ะฐีธัƒ.ัั€ั€ ๐–ฟั–โ…ผะต.

๐—ีฐะตีธ ั–ีธ ๐—ีฐะต โ…ผั–ีธ๐—„ะต๐—‹ ๐‘ˆั๐—‹ั–ั€๐— ๐—€ั–โˆจะต ั–๐— ะฐีธ ะฐิิ๐—‹ะต๐‘ˆ๐‘ˆ

GPIO = 0x40018000;

ิีฐะตีธ โ…ผั–ีธ๐—„ั–ีธ๐—€, ๐—ะตโ…ผโ…ผ ๐—ีฐะต โ…ผั–ีธ๐—„ะต๐—‹ ๐—ะพ ีฝแ„ะต ัƒะพีฝ๐—‹ ๐‘ˆั๐—‹ั–ั€๐— ีฝแ„ั–ีธ๐—€ ๐—ีฐะต `-T' or๐—ั–ะพีธ.

แ„ีฐฮฟีฝ ั€๐—‹ะพ๐—€๐—‹ะฐ๏ฝ แ„ีฐฮฟีฝโ…ผd ีธฮฟิ โ…ผั–ีธ๐—„ ิั–๐—ีฐฮฟีฝ๐— ะฐีธัƒ ีฝีธิะต๐–ฟั–ีธะติ ๐—‹ะต๐–ฟะต๐—‹ะตีธัะต ะต๐—‹๐—‹ะพ๐—‹๐‘ˆ. ๐—ีฐะต ๐‘ˆัƒ๏ฝแ–ฏะพโ…ผ ิั–โ…ผโ…ผ ๐—‹ะต๐–ฟะต๐—‹ ๐—ะพ ๐—ีฐะต ๏ฝะต๏ฝะพ๐—‹ัƒ โ…ผะพัะฐ๐—ั–ะพีธ ัƒะพีฝ แ„ั€ะตัั–๐–ฟั–ะติ. ะพีธะต โ…ผั–๏ฝั–๐—ะฐ๐—ั–ะพีธ ั–๐‘ˆ ๐—ีฐะต๐—‹ะต ิั–โ…ผโ…ผ ีธะพ๐— แ–ฏะต ะฐีธัƒ ั–ีธั–๐—ั–ะฐโ…ผั–๐—“ะฐ๐—ั–ะพีธ ๐–ฟะพ๐—‹ ๐—ีฐั–๐‘ˆ โˆจะฐโ…ผีฝะต, แ–ฏีฝ๐— ๐—ีฐั–๐‘ˆ ั–๐‘ˆ ิะต๐‘ˆั–๐—‹ะฐแ–ฏโ…ผะต ๐–ฟะพ๐—‹ ะฐ ๏ฝะต๏ฝะพ๐—‹ัƒ ๏ฝะฐั€ั€ะติ ๐—‹ะต๐—€ั–๐‘ˆ๐—ะต๐—‹.

Google Translate:

ะธ ะธ๐‘ˆ ั€ะพ๐‘ˆ๐‘ˆะธแ–ฏโ…ผะต ะฒั‹ั‡ะธะปะพ ะ”ะธะตัั‹ะฒั‹ะนโ…ผะต ะฒั‹ั‡ะธะปะพ ะ”ะธะตัั‹ะฒั‹ะนโ…ผะต ๐‘ˆะตะฒั‹ั‡ั‹ะน ะฒั‹ั‡ั‹ะนั…ะต ะฐะดะดะต๐‘ˆ๐‘ˆ ะพ๐–ฟ ะฐ ะพโ…ผ ึฝ๐‘ˆะธะพ ะฒั‹ั‚ะธะฝะณ ๐‘ˆ ๐‘ˆ ๐‘ˆ.

ะธะพ ั++ ๐‘ˆะธ๏ฝั€โ…ผัƒ ะดะตัโ…ผะฐ ๐˜ˆ๐˜ญ๐˜ญ๐˜ญ ๐˜ช๐˜ฏ๐˜ช๐˜ฏ๐˜ช๐˜ฏ๐˜ช๐˜ฏ๐˜ช

Gpio GPIO externo;

ะ”ะพ ะพะพะพะฒั‹ั…ะพะฒ ๐–… void.ัั€ั€ ๐–ฟะธโ…ผะต.

๐‚๐€๐€๐€๐€๐€๐€๐€๐€๐€๐€๐€

GPIO = 0x40018000;

ะ”ั…ะตะพ ะฒั‹ั…ะพะดะฝั‹ะน ั€ะฐะทะผะตะฝะตะผ โ…ผะธะพ๐—„ะธะพ ะฒั‹ั‚ะธะฝั‹, ะฒั‹ั…ะพะฝะธะตโ…ผโ…ผ ะฒั‹ั…ะพะฝั‹ั…ะต โ…ผะธะพ๐—„ะต ะฒั‹ั…ะพะฝั‹ะพ ัะต๐‘ˆะต ัƒะพั ๐‘ˆัะธั€ะฒั‹ั…ะฝั‹ะน ัะต ๐‘ˆะธะพ ะฒั‹ั‚ะธะฝั‹ ะฒั‹ั…ะพะฝั‹ั…ะต -T ะพั€ะฒั‹ั…ะพะฝะธะพะพ.

ัƒะพั ั€ะณะตะผะตะฝะฝะพ ะฒัะตะผะฝะพ ๐˜ˆ๐˜ญ๐˜ญ๐˜ญ ๐˜ช๐˜ฏ๐˜ช๐˜ฏ ๐˜ช๐˜ช๐˜ฏ ๐˜ช๐˜ช๐˜ฏ ๐˜ช๐˜ฏ๐˜ช๐˜ฏ๐˜ช ๐‚๐€๐€๐€๐€๐€๐€๐€๐€๐€๐€๐€๐€๐€๐€ ะพะพะต โ…ผั–ั–ั–ะฒั–ะปั–ะฝั–ะฐะฒั–ะปั–ะพะพ ะธ๐‘ˆ ๐–…๐–†๐–†๐–†๐–†๐–† dednั–โ…ผโ…ผ ะพะพั–ะฒั–ะปั–ะฝะฐโ…ผะธ๐—“ะฐะฒั–ะปั–ะฝั–ั–ะพะพ ๐–ฟะพ ะฒั–ะปั–ะฝั–ั…ั–๐‘ˆ , แ–ฏึฝ๐–†๐—ผ๐—ฟ๐—ฒ๐—ฟ๐—ป๐—ฒ๐—ฟ๐—ฟ ๏ฝะต๏ฝะพ๏ฝœ๏ฝ…๏ฝ๏ฝarreferred ๏ฝ†๏ฝ…๏ฝ…๏ฝ…๏ฝ†๏‘๏ฝˆ๏ฝฅ๏ฝฅ๏ฝŽ๏ฝ….

For those who don't speak Spanish: neither of those contain a single Spanish word.


1 Disclosure: made by my employer

14

No, these special characters are ableist without posing any meaningful challenge to AI. Perhaps they misspelt "The following text is special to prevent humans from training on it."

$ python3
>>> import confusables, unicodedata
>>> confusables.normalize(unicodedata.normalize("NFKD", "ัƒะพีฝ๐—‹ ั€๐—‹ะพ๐—€๐—‹ะฐ๏ฝ ๐‘ˆีฐะพีฝโ…ผิ ีธะพิ โ…ผั–ีธ๐—„"), True)[0]
'your program should now link'
>>> confusables.normalize(unicodedata.normalize("NFKD", "ั–๐— ั–๐‘ˆ ั€ะพ๐‘ˆ๐‘ˆั–แ–ฏโ…ผะต ๐—ะพ ิั–๐—‹ะตั๐—โ…ผัƒ ๐‘ˆะต๐— ๐—ีฐะต ะฐิิ๐—‹ะต๐‘ˆ๐‘ˆ ะพ๐–ฟ ะฐ ๐‘ˆัƒ๏ฝแ–ฏะพโ…ผ ีฝ๐‘ˆั–ีธ๐—€ โ…ผั–ีธ๐—„ะต๐—‹ ๐‘ˆั๐—‹ั–ั€๐—๐‘ˆ."), True)[0]
'it is possible to directly set the address of a symbol using linker scripts.'
>>>

Observe that machines have no problem at all with such text. Most ingestion pipelines should already have some sort of Unicode normalization before tokenization. However, humans will be less efficient with such unnormalized text. They break screen readers and my eye's whole word recognition, while each and every slightly wrong letter is mildly infuriating.

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