Artificial Intelligence (a.k.a. GPT, LLM, generative AI, genAI) tools may not be used to generate answers for Stack Overflow. The answers you provide must either be your own original work, or the properly cited work of others. If your answers are determined to have been written by AI, they will likely be deleted, along with any reputation earned from them. Posting AI-generated content repeatedly may lead to a warning from moderators, or even a suspension from the site.
What counts as an “answer generated by Artificial Intelligence tools”?
An “answer generated by Artificial Intelligence tools” is any answer crafted in part or in whole using a tool that writes a response automatically based on a prompt it is provided. These tools include large language models like GPT and Bard. Because these tools are trained to answer with language that matches authentic text, the responses may look and sound plausible, but the quality of generated answers can vary significantly (up to, and including, completely wrong answers).
Some examples of AI services commonly used to write infringing answers on Stack Overflow include:
- GPT (aka ChatGPT)
- Bard (LaMDA)
- Bing Chat
- LLaMA
Please do not draft answers for Stack Overflow using GPT or other large language model (LLM) services like the ones listed here.
Why am I not allowed to use Artificial Intelligence services to draft my answer?
Stack Exchange is a collaborative resource, developed and maintained by members of the community. There are a few primary issues with content generated by large language models that makes it unsuitable for use on Stack Exchange:
- Users who ask questions on Stack Overflow expect to receive an answer authored and vetted by a human. This ensures that the answer is factual, relevant, and complete, up to the standards of another human. While human authors are not perfect, Artificial Intelligence may not take into account other important factors to a question (i.e. optimization, security, etc.), often add excessive noise to their answers (i.e. explaining all details, no matter how relevant), and may fabricate false or misleading information.
- Users who ask questions on Stack Overflow may have already sought answers elsewhere. Due to the ease of using Artificial Intelligence services, if a user wanted an answer from an Artificial Intelligence, it can be assumed that they would already have sought one. If they did not want an answer from an Artificial Intelligence, it does not make sense to provide one here.
- AIs are not capable of citing the sources of knowledge used up to the standards of the Stack Exchange network. Even when Artificial Intelligence appears to cite sources for responses, such sources may not be relevant to the original request, or may not exist at all. For Stack Overflow, this means the answer may not honestly or fairly represent the sources of knowledge used, even if someone explicitly cites the Artificial Intelligence as an author in their answer.
Are there alternatives to using Artificial Intelligence services?
Many of the answers on Stack Overflow are created by users sharing their own expertise, though this is not required. In particular, when supplying answers outside their expertise, users should cite trustworthy sources. Searching for sources, synthesizing them into a good answer, and citing them clearly are critical steps in developing a well-crafted answer.
Remember - the person who asked a question needs a correct answer. As such, answering correctly is always more important than answering quickly, plus our system thrives on questions getting multiple good answers, which are more likely to help future visitors who have the same question. By following a process that creates consistently correct answers of good quality, and that are well-cited as needed, you will do just fine here.