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sigmartoday at 7:05 PM4 repliesview on HN

>My recommendation is also to not choose an extreme approach (e.g. by completely banning LLM-related discourse) unless you feel very strongly about it.

Organizers are allowed to ban the mention of certain programming topics? I could understand if it was a topic that was adjacent to violence/harassment/sensitive stuff, but come on... are anti-AI groups becoming a cult?


Replies

nvme0n1p1today at 7:17 PM

Yes, organizers can do whatever they want. Their event, their rules. If you put in the work to run a Python meetup, you are free to ban discussion of tomatoes if you really want to. Conversely, those with tomato psychosis are free to avoid your event if they truly can't survive a few hours without talking about tomatoes.

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gamerdonkeytoday at 7:38 PM

I was once in a hackerspace that held regular "show and tell" nights for people to present interesting technology projects. We eventually hit a rash of non-regulars bringing in "projects" that were essentially sales-pitches for devices sold through multi-level marketing scams. Figuring out how to ban those without blocking someone who intended to monetize their projects was tricky.

Point being: just because a thing technically fits the genre does not mean it is something that the audience wants to listen to.

xantronixtoday at 8:17 PM

Generative AI has and their providers have become an implicitly political subject. It shouldn't come as a surprise.

repelsteeltjetoday at 7:18 PM

I think you misread that. He's recommending not completely banning the subject.

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