I've given a lot of time before writing this because I think at this point we all have been able to digest and rationalize what is happening around this phenomena.

First of all, I fully agree with the temporary policy, and I am in favor that it becomes a "permanent temporary" one.

The main reason I'm on that opinion is not the fact of the tool being available, but the way so many people were using it: as a copy-pastable BS generator for social networking engagement (in our case, SO reputation). This alone spawns several reasons for why it should be banned, but I don't have to point them out anymore, as it should be common knowledge right now.

I am **not** in favour of computer-aided code writing as a tool to show examples of how a particular question can be solved. That is a job for [GitHub Copilot][1] or other places, not for this website. People can go straight to GPT-3's playground and ask the program to write code for them as an additional reference, but Stack Overflow should remain as human-aided different points of view in a given problem in the form of a question.

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On the other hand:

I would like to add to the debate "legitimate" use of the technology. Consider some people who are savvy on the topic of the community (in our case, programming), but they are not proficient in the use of English or in a general sense, for whatever reason, haven't developed very good communication abilities.

Would you consider the potential contributions of such a person less valuable than another one who can express themselves "better" (in the sense of getting their point across close to the most optimal possible way)?

Now take the conclusion you've reached by reading the last two paragraphs and let's see what professionals of the marketing area are doing. They're using ChatGPT as a tool for computer-aided writing. Sure, the lazy ones are just copying and pasting whatever the program spits out, but in the hands of a capable professional, ChatGPT is much more powerful and is faster than hours of googling, which is what they were doing until now.

Also, that is what we programmers were doing until now. Of course, our main sources of inspiration are probably Stack Overflow, but there's a lot of forums around. Just like [Server Fault][2] users rely mostly on Server Fault, but the [ArchWiki][3] is still a reliable curated source of information, among other wikis and forums. But we all became dependent on search engines like [Google Search][4].

Come to think about it, it came as no particular surprise to me that [Microsoft decided to integrate ChatGPT into the Bing search engine][5].

There is a specific [ELI5][6] [prompt on the ChatGPT API examples page][7] that try to show how to use the power of synthetic dialectics to further clarify a subject. The job of a communicator is to find the best words in the best order to exchange an idea to a specific target group. And in that field, ChatGPT is not a terrific tool, but it can aid many people as it is right now.

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My point is that computer-assisted writing is a beneficial thing. People can use it to write better **questions** primarily, but also improve their answers' wording. This is specially useful for the handful of people I've described earlier: the ones proficient in programming, but not as much in writing English, or in communicating in general.

The distinction between computer-assisted writing and copy pasting from a BS generator should be obvious.

I could send this whole answer to proof reading humans or ChatGPT and bet excellent feedback from the humans, but reasonable good feedback from the program. It would look less like I'm the author of it, but in both cases, you, the reader, would struggle less to understand what I want to tell you. **DISCLAIMER: I did neither. This is 100% my first take on writing the answer, without revision.**

Finally, my opinion is that people should somehow feel that it's ok to use computer programs to aid their writing. I'm not sure how the [anti GPT policy](https://stackoverflow.com/help/gpt-policy) could be further improved to include this, or if is it even necessary.

I will repeat this paragraph from the beginning, now that the reader has a new perspective:

I am **not** in favour of computer-aided code writing as a tool to show examples of how a particular question can be solved. That is a job for GitHub Copilot or other places, not for this website. People can go straight to GPT-3's playground and ask the program to write code for them as an additional reference, but Stack Overflow should remain as human-aided different points of view in a given problem in the form of a question.

  [1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GitHub_Copilot
  [2]: https://serverfault.com/tour
  [3]: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/ArchWiki
  [4]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Search
  [5]: https://blogs.microsoft.com/blog/2023/02/07/reinventing-search-with-a-new-ai-powered-microsoft-bing-and-edge-your-copilot-for-the-web/
  [6]: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/ELI5
  [7]: https://platform.openai.com/examples/default-summarize