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throwaway2037today at 9:21 AM5 repliesview on HN

    > any content submitted that is clearly labelled as LLM-generated (including issues, merge requests, and merge request descriptions) will be immediately closed
Note the word "clearly". Weirdly, as a native English speaker this term makes the policy less strict. What about submarine LLM submissions?

I have no beef with Redox OS. I wish them well. This feels like the newest form of OSS virtue signaling.


Replies

layer8today at 10:33 AM

> What about submarine LLM submissions?

That would constitute an attempt to circumvent their policy, with the consequence of being banned from the project. In other words, it makes not clearly labeling any LLM use a bannable offense.

oytistoday at 9:59 AM

Don't ask don't tell looks like a reasonable policy. If no one can tell that your code was written by an LLM and you claim authorship, then whether you have actually written it is a matter of your conscience.

BlackLotus89today at 9:30 AM

I read that as benefit of the doubt, which is a reasonable stance.

eesmithtoday at 9:43 AM

As a native English speaker I read this as two parts. If it's obvious, the response is immediate and not up for debate. If it's not obvious then it falls in the second part - "any attempt to bypass this policy will result in a ban from the project".

A submarine submission, if discovered, will result in a ban.

Using the phrase "virtual signaling" long ago became a meaningless term other than to indicate one's views in a culture war. 10 years ago David Shariatmadari wrote "The very act of accusing someone of virtue signalling is an act of virtue signalling in itself", https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/jan/20/virtue... .

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