In February 2024, an article explaining the site's policy regarding the use of content derived from generative artificial intelligence tools (GenAI) was added to the Help center pages of every Stack Exchange site. This policy covers both answers and questions that use GenAI content. As explained on Meta Stack Exchange Proposed changes to Help Center articles to include mention of AI-generated content policy, sites were given the option of banning all such content, or of permitting the use of some GenAI content, if it's properly attributed. Moderators can customise this Help center article, if desired.
Previous discussions here on Physics meta made it quite clear that our community is generally not in favour of GenAI content. The main pages containing these discussions are Please don't use computer-generated text for questions or answers on Physics and Physics.SE remains a site by humans, for humans. Also see If I see a question mentioning an AI as the source, should I modify it?.
Here's the link to that Help centre article:
What is this site’s policy on content generated by generative artificial intelligence tools?
It commences:
Generative artificial intelligence (a.k.a. GPT, LLM, generative AI, genAI) tools can be used to generate content for Physics Stack Exchange, but this content must be properly referenced as per our guidance
I must admit that I was quite surprised when I first discovered that Help page. In light of the previous discussions, I assumed that Physics.SE would opt for the "No GenAI" version of that Help page. I suspect that many members of our community also assume that GenAI content is not permitted here, or is at least strongly discouraged.
It's well-known that Stack Overflow does not permit answers derived from GenAI. The meta SO page Policy: Generative AI (e.g., ChatGPT) is banned has over 1.4 million views. However, even on SO questions arising from GenAI interactions are not necessarily banned. See Should we flag human-written questions that use code generated by ChatGPT?. That answer was written by Martijn Pieters when he was still a moderator. Admittedly, Martijn's answer generated some controversy...
Stack Overflow was the first site in the network to implement and enforce a GenAI policy. Within days of the release of ChatGPT, people started posting GenAI answers on SO, often without checking the validity of those answers. Within a week, the site was getting flooded with such content, and the moderators there needed to act quickly. An outright ban seemed like the only practical solution.
Our policy here on Physics.SE has taken a somewhat different approach. We haven't been flooded with GenAI content, and our moderators felt that we don't need to ban content purely on the grounds that it was produced using GenAI. Instead, we can simply judge such content on its own merits. A good Physics.SE answer must support the statements it makes. We expect content here to cite trustworthy references, and to give proper attribution to all material created by others. Current GenAI tools have been trained on vast bodies of text, but they don't actually "remember" the sources of the words they regurgitate. They simply produce sequences of tokens that are statistically consistent with the token sequences in the training data. (Some recent tools do attempt to give references, but they're basically just guesswork. They simply do a search through Web data looking for a near match to the token sequence they just generated).
GenAI tools function by transforming token sequences. They don't contain a mechanism for verifying the truthfulness or logical consistency of those sequences. And they certainly don't attempt to directly model physics. They can produce text that may appear reasonable at first glance, but which falls apart under expert analysis.
Under our current policy, we don't need to ban such text merely because it comes from GenAI: we can reject it simply because it's low quality. It states alleged facts with no support. And any factual statements that it does manage to generate do not cite their origins.
Is this policy adequate? Or should we have a stricter "no GenAI" policy?
We don't actually get many GenAI answers on this site. And people posting such answers often add valid references to them, or at least Wikipedia links which cite valid references.
However, we occasionally get questions that mention the use of GenAI. Typically, the OP asked a GenAI their question, and they're asking us to verify the GenAI answer. Or the answer they got was just confusing, and they want us to explain it. Should we permit such questions?
I'm happy to help clear up misconceptions that people have regarding physics, no matter how they arose. On the other hand, I have zero desire to explain why a LLM may have concocted some piece of nonsense.
Is our current GenAI policy Help page adequate? Does it need any amendments? Or should we opt for a strict "no GenAI" page? Should we permit questions that mention the use of GenAI? If so, should there be any restrictions on the form of those questions?