I recently asked this meta question about recommending ChatGPT for fixing typos. The consensus was a very clear "recommending ChatGPT for typos is a bad idea."
However, in this main question, someone posted the following comment:
What about using ChatGPT to get started? With some experience with asking questions and with requesting improvements of code if the by LLMs provided code does not work you will be then able to let them write the code for you ...
With the policy as written, I would probably interpret this as allowed because OP didn't use GenAI to write this comment. My meta question isn't exactly applicable either; this question wasn't asking for simple debugging, it was asking for a brand-new program from scratch.1
But in my eyes, leaving that comment is still a bad idea for all the reasons in both the official policy and the community answer to the meta question. Not only will GenAI likely give a bad answer, it could encourage both OP and people who see the question to make GenAI a central part of their workflow, which will just multiply the problems.
Put differently, it seems weird to me that SO won't let people offer pure AI solutions, but they will let them tell askers to go create their own pure AI solutions, which would probably be just as bad or worse.
That leads me to:
- Is this comment in violation of the AI policy?
- Should the AI policy more explicitly ban comments and answers whose sole function is to direct people towards GenAI?
- Should #2 become general SO guidance, even if it is not official?
1 Which is obviously a problem, but one unrelated to this post.