Disclaimer: I already flagged this behavior and the flag got rejected.
I found a user who's been editing posts a lot. Great, so far. The edits fall into various categories, such as retagging, fixing typos, fixing formatting (code fences etc), which are all fine as far as I can see.
However, there are also edits that rephrase/reword the prose that strike me as gratuitous, for its own sake, even compulsive. From the editing user's comments I know they are not as "eloquent" as these edits suggest. I suspect they're using AI for this. The edits happen at a pace that cannot be called "casual" for a human, i.e. I'd be hard-pressed to emit edits at that consistency, quality, and rate.
Examples from an edit on a recent question, with some emphasis added by me:
original | edited to read |
---|---|
Finding files responsible for heap out of memory | Locating files that are causing heap out of memory issues |
I understand this is because I have some recursive types in typescript | I comprehend the reason is due to having certain recursive types in typescript |
but I don't know the file they're in | yet I am unaware of the location of the file they're in |
When I opened the files | Upon opening the files |
they showed in VS code as errors and were marked | they appeared as errors in VS code and were highlighted |
After I closed the file | After shutting down the document |
there is no more error and I can't find the file. | no error was found and the file cannot be located. |
I grant you, many many questions have terrible prose for various reasons, and I think a touch of AI would make them easier to read... but I think this is going too far. Another edit I remember (can't find just now) even altered the meaning of the asker's post in subtle ways. It was difficult to figure out in the first place, so I guess the AI went out on a limb there.
What do you think about that?