It's 2024. I visited 3 pages of answers. None contains the buzzword "copyright".

I want to share another very strong reason why it's a very good idea to ban AI-generated answers:

## LLMs causes extra Copyright and Credit Nightmares

Popular large language models are like Pandora's pots, trained over millions and millions of obscure copyrighted materials, and this can surely cause extra potential **copyright violations** that can be tricky to be proactively identified, to assure long life to the Stack Exchange network, distant from boring extra lawsuits and extra mass "content takedown" requests.

### Because LLMs Do Not Give Authorship Credits

#### ...for Technical Reasons

No known popular large language model was currently designed to give you the original sources. A "generic human" can tell you who taught to sum 1 plus 1: they can find their early Math school book and find out which page of that book says so. LLMs, instead, are trained differently, and cannot just give references in the expected way.

Some advanced LLMs acts _like_ are able to give you references, but if you pay attention, even these are "just" capable to share "further information", and only _after_ whatever text is generated (e.g. Microsoft Copilot, ...).

#### ...for Political Reasons

Moreover, popular LLMs usually do not even share the original dataset on their website (and this is a political issue, not a technical issue; as the dataset can be shared in whatever moment, especially from organizations that have "Open" and "AI" in their official name).

Indeed this practice of closing the dataset does not simplify the backward work of finding the right credit to a generated text.

### Because we are supposed to release in CC BY-SA 4.0

Premising that, as I hope everyone already noted, in every single page of the Stack Exchange Network, there is this phrase at the footer of the website:

>  Site design / logo © 2024 Stack Exchange Inc; user contributions licensed under [CC BY-SA][1].

Please take 60 seconds to read this page, if it's your first time:

https://stackoverflow.com/help/licensing

It just means that new contents must be covered by these terms:

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/

(Again please take additional 60 seconds to read this ↑)

Also note that there is not any "unless otherwise noted" in the above SE copyright terms.

## TL;DR

Both the Stack Exchange Inc. and the SE community have probably no sufficient time to fight this additional copyright risk, and moral risks, of giving no sufficient credits to original content authors.

The potentially high benefits do not outweigh the potentially very very very high risks, especially without enforcing an extra care and awareness.

## Next Steps?

1. **SE policy lacks an "unless otherwise noted"**
    - At the moment the [copyright terms of SE][1] does not mention the phrase "unless otherwise noted". That phrase is quite useful, since our planet has billions of contents under thousands of licenses, and very often answers are like "*«bla bla bla snippet citation1 citation2 citation3*" and indeed this kind of answers are not content under CC BY-SA 4.0, but are instead contents released under the terms of the upstream copyright holder. Usually, official code snippets are pasted here on Stack Overflow as answer but just as mention, to quickly find that upstream documentation. So indeed, with or without AI-generated contents, a global "unless otherwise noted" would probably help in quoting external contents (ChatGPT included I guess...).
2. **Evaluate "fair use" policies**
    - If you know what you are doing, small "low quality" citations of proprietary sources can be used even if they are "all rights reserved". Note that [Wikipedia has interesting "fair use" policies][2]. Instead the multimedia archive [Wikimedia Commons does not generally allow fair use][3]. But this discussion is a minefield.
3. **Evaluate big disclaimers about AI**
    - Basically stuff like https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Template:PD-algorithm


  [1]: https://stackoverflow.com/help/licensing
  [2]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_Fair_use/Fair_use_rationale
  [3]: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Fair_use