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22:07
502
A: Temporary policy: ChatGPT is banned

Peter OlsonI guess the big gaping question is how we can determine whether an answer used ChatGPT or not. I can see how it's obvious from a systemic standpoint what is going on, given the influx of plausible-looking answers, but do we have any definitive way of knowing whether or not an individual answer us...

I think this should be its own question, and link back to this question
What about asking ChatGPT whether or not the answers are from ChatGPT? (I'm just joking)
AKX
AKX
There are some "tells": It looks like the issue/There are a few problems ... To fix this,/Here is an example of, and the answer nearly always ends with I hope this helps! unless it's been cropped out.
Answers generated by AI language models like ChatGPT can sometimes be detected by their content, style, and other characteristics. For example, answers generated by AI models may contain factual errors, lack coherence or cohesiveness, or use a distinctive language or style that is not typical of human-written text. (response written by ChatGPT lmao)
Fortunately some members are boasting about posting lots of answers using CGPT on Twitter making it very easy to identify them here and flag them.
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@AKX could you post more examples? I ask this because I usually begin answers with "Looks like...", "Seems to be", "There are multiple issues" and similar, I swear I don't use CGPT
AKX
AKX
@GrafiCode See this search for examples; with a quick eyeballing the 10 newest answers are likely all ChatGPT.
Also we can post the question to the ChatGPT and check if answer is the same)
@GuruStron That's not possible because ChatGPT seems to never generate the same answer twice. There is some randomness included in the process that generates the answer.
The problem is, all you need to do is ask it to write a reply that does not look like something written by ChatGPT. It's a language model. It does language really well.
@Killroy I don't know how ChatGPT was trained, but it might even have been trained in conjunction with a classifier for human/AI, which gets trained with the ChatGPT output, until it's very good at telling AI language from human language, which is then used to train the AI to become better at deceiving said classifier, until that can't tell AI from human anymore; swap who's getting trained, rinse, repeat… it might very well be computationally (read: financially) infeasible to ever find an automated way of telling ChatGPT from a human user with good English skills.
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ChatGPT needs an API to determine if a text has been ChatGPT output in the past (X time)...
@Cerbrus and how do you propose to make that invariant to minor modifications (the answer is: train a language model… see my comment directly above yours)
@Marcus hey it's the best I got :D There's a lot of plagiarism detection software that can determine how likely it is to be the source.
IMO anyone that have read sufficient material should be able to tell 'em apart. If someone posts a ChatGPT answer just once it'd probably be easy to handle, and if someone turns this into a habit we can also identify.
I must admit that there's no definitive way to determine if a specific answer is AI-generated, but if someone posts a stream of terrible answers, our existing policy (plus the auto ban system) handles that very well.
I believe this policy is more of a heads-up policy for users not to use this tool rather than something that can be seriously enforced. If an answer generated by ChatGPT is correct it might fall under the radar, but incorrect answers with pristine writing will quickly be suspect of using the AI.
ChatGPT actually doesn't know itself, in the sense that it wasn't pretrained on the text generated by itself, so probably we can not directly ask ChatGPT if a piece of text was generated by it.
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@Rafael I actually asked ChatGPT, and it confirms your theory. It also claims it doesn't store sessions or responses... Now, whether or not that's all fact, or it's just generating something we want to hear... Who knows?
I’d say it shouldn’t matter whether a post was written by an AI. Something should have been done back when plausibly-sounding garbage posts were generated at merely human speeds.
@user3840170: Indeed. Before this there were already a lot of plain old plagiarism and "try this" answers (code dumps without any explanation) around. The model that was introduced in 2008 was already outdated by 2010.
user14795243
"I guess the big gaping question is how we can determine whether an answer used ChatGPT or not." Would this be because there is also a high percentage of human generated answers on SO that look correct but on deeper inspection are not? I'm sure there will be disagreement, but fact is people play for a score more than to help. I have seen MANY amateurishly wrong answers here, and more often than not an answer will be accepted that allows the asker to check a "I'm done" box rather than to do something correctly. I've had more than my share of bugs to fix due to devs copying SO answers.
Another tell: Posting a generic code block, then including This is only an example, You can modify this to suit your specific needs
There are tools for recognizing GPT output but I doubt they'll work for long as new training sets are made.
There are GPT2 detectors that folks are saying are decent at detecting ChatGPT.
For those concerned about the difficulty of identifying GPT answers: from my experience so far, it's easy. They all look pretty much the same: perfect grammar, short sentences with exactly high-school English, pandering/conversational tone. Much of the time, even if they're right, they're answering a different question than posted by OP or there's something pretty clearly "off". All the code snippets have obnoxiously helpful comments in them. The answerer will generally not take the time to format inline code. They stick out like a sore thumb after you've seen 3 or 4.
Soon the Internet will be nothing but warring bots and we'll have to go back to doing things the old-fashioned way with pen and paper. Or Windows 3.1.
You can make a discriminator model that classifies ChatGPT answers from human answers. Also you can tell based on the posters history.... ChatGPT answers are likely to come from people who have no previous answers. That's likely the biggest tell right now.
@ricosrealm there are indeed many brand new users who have started posting ChatGPT answers. But also plenty of exiting users have done it. A more accurate thing is to check the cut-off from before December 2022 vs after and how the answers compare. ChatGPT was only released on the 30th of November.
You feed the question into ChatGTP, if the answer matches an answer on here then it's ChatGTP.
@Cerbrus That API would be useful right now, but long-term, bots like ChatGPT will be available for people to run on their own PC. A more flexible defense may be to train a stronger AI to detect AI-written answers.
"bots like ChatGPT will be available for people to run on their own PC" Eh no, not with the dataset it requires.
This question is discussed here: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/421880/…
@AKX There are a few problems with your comment; namely it pretty much describes my own writing style to the letter, and I'm probably human. Hope this helps!
@JohnHunt Would that generate false positives if the particular GPT instance you were feeding questions to was actively updated with SE posts as a training data set? Also, you'd have to know which GPT instance you suspected, since you'd have to feed the question into one that used the same data set as the one used to generate the answer.
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"As a large language model trained by OpenAI" is also a sign.
Since the problem arose because of the quantity of AI answers from some users flooding untested answers here, a good starting defence might be to have a "possible AI" report button that is silent to users but which allows moderators (or even automated systems!) to quickly check the activity of particular users for suspicious activity like sudden changes in style, accuracy, or frequency of post. That might deal with the 'low hanging fruit' quickly.
I think that @Cerbrus has hit on something. If ChatGPT could store a a checksum for it's responses in say the last month. Then you'd create a checksum when a comment/post is made and fire this at the ChatGPT API to do a quick match against queries and return a boolean and maybe some extra metadata like the date of the query and where ChatGPT got the data used for the response. A return of TRUE would then flag the comment/post as potentially ChatGPT/AI generated and either throw it into a moderation pool or visually flag it as a potential "ChatGPT/AI" response.
AI generated text is easy to spot: If you read it and the voice in your head sounds like a robot, the text was AI generated.
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New review queue: Possibly AI generated answers
OpenAI is working on watermarking.
22:07
we need another AI that will tell if it is AI
@StefanPaulNoack Easy or not depends on your language/cultural background.
Maybe we should copy an answer and ask ChatGPT if it has generated this sentence/answer before ?
One commenter wrote "There are some "tells": It looks like the issue/There are a few problems ... To fix this,/Here is an example of, and the answer nearly always ends with I hope this helps! unless it's been cropped out." Which is exactly how a consultant is taught to write, at least in my field. In fact, I've actually been accused of posting generated form content on one forum once for that exact reason. It's weird. One other commenter hit the nail on the head - we need a Generative Adversarial Network AI to recognize ChatGPT. Problem is, ChatGPT devs will do the same. It's an arms race.
I know this is gonna be unpopular for other reasons but you could prevent pasting into the answer box. Or at least anything that isn't formatted as source code.
I recently posted a question and a highlight ranked user had no problem helping until I joked about "Even ChatGPT got it wrong" and he decided to have a little temper tantrum and re-direct me here. The answer I was provided with was short and to the point and so was my question. When faced with a problem, I usually google the issue and recently with the introduction of ChatGPT, I've started using this as a secondary step. If all else fails, I post my question on SA. The moderator decided to entertain this irate highly ranked user and decided to delete my question. No common sense applied.
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@Thierry This blanket ban on the use of ChatGPT applies to all content posted here, whether it's an answer or a question. Your question was asking for help debugging code generated by ChatGPT. That is not allowed. If it were, we could have a nearly-infinite number of questions posted by users trying to debug faulty or nonsensical code generated by ChatGPT. We don't want that. No one entertained anyone based on rank. A moderator reviewed your post and determined that it violated these rules. No one had any tantrums. Your question simply broke our rules, so it was deleted.
The code was not generated by ChatGPT. My comment was a "joke" that even ChatGPT could not answer my question. I fully agree that questions (with or without code) or answers generated by ChatGPT should be banned and I have to disagree that the code was reviewed as it is quite standard in many articles but I just had a single line that was invalid.
@CodyGray On another note, as mentioned, that highly ranked user had no problem helping until I joked about ChatGPT and then a moderator had an issue with what I posted. As much as I'd like to think this was an over-reaction, it certainly appears to be after seeing how that user went from helpful to "SHOUTING" in his comment. Anyway, it's done now and I know, going forward, I will not leave personal comments/joke as clearly it can backfire!
Maybe you shouldn't joke about using things that are banned, @Thierry. Joking about how you're carrying a bomb is likely to get you detained by airport security. Joking about using ChatGPT to generate content is likely to get that content removed by a Stack Overflow moderator. Please stop blaming that user. They were not involved. You can feel free to blame the moderator team. We're the ones who reviewed the post and made the decision. If you think that the deletion was in error because you were not actually using ChatGPT, you can flag the question for moderator attention and plead your case.
@CodyGray Quite condescending reply tbh to make a point. Comparing potential code being generated by AI, which I clearly stated wasn't (nor was the answer), to talking about bombs in an airport is just ridiculous. Anyway, like I said in my last comment, lesson learnt! Not worth spending any more time on this. I'm sure we both have more valuable and interesting things to do. Good luck :)
Fight fire with fire. A machine learning algorithm fed enough real and ChatGPT answers could be trained to identity the fake ones.
The scary thing, or cool thing (depending on how you look at it) is that this is basically the exact premise of Blade Runner. How do you tell what is a machine and what is human when the machine is this humanlike?
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The Turing test. "Bot or not? That is the question." Soon to be answerable only by checking for DNA and vital signs?
If they start blocking answers that SEEM like chat GPT...watch how quickly this turns into ableism towards autistics
jfs
jfs
@Sublow: if you can't tell the difference, then what is the point in trying to find one? xkcd.com/810
"I'm not afraid of the day when a machine passes the Turing test. I'm afraid of the day when it fails one... on purpose!"
We can ask ChatGPT to see if the answers are generated by it.
@stackoverblown which wouldn't work.
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Can we just ask ChatGPT itself? I just asked it: "did you write this" and included text from above and it responsed "Yes, I did write that response to a question from someone else. If you have any further questions or if there's anything else I can help you with, feel free to ask!" ... But maybe it would get that wrong too - heyho!
@ChrisB you completely misunderstand how it works then. It will just say "Yes" or "No" basically at random. Then stick to this answer as it writes more details. That's how all answers are generated - picks something then makes it sound convincing. It doesn't have a database of all replies it ever generated that it consults when you ask it.
@user3840170: Tell that to some 'experts' in some 'fields' (especially starting with "Phi"). Soon nobody will be able to distinguish chatgpt output from human output in those.
@ggorlen "They all look pretty much the same: perfect grammar, short sentences with exactly high-school English, pandering/conversational tone." If the prompter didn't put effort, yeah, sure. That's the default style of ChatGPT. But it's not its limitation. Ask it to write in style of a human software development engineer who is quite fluent in English, but not a native speaker. The issue is that while it might be easy to detect stuff that didn't really try to hide, the bar goes much higher when it starts trying.
If the response is not rude, condescending or otherwise unhelpful and/or with no spelling or grammatical errors there's a good bet it's ChatGPT.
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@Hasen I was about to write that here. That being "rude" is the key to this. Haha you didn't disappoint. Either we should over practice being rude here or we should learn the unique writing styles of each users here. I think the former would be the more efficient method :-)
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This policy has no value. AI generated text can be paraphrased and will never be spotted.
@AKX this is awesome. From now on I will start all my answers with "It looks like the issue might be with ..." just to freak people out ;)
AKX
AKX
@Super-intelligentShade Sure, that'll cause more work for mods, and certainly make you super popular.
Another important tell is that AI-generated answers, with their near-perfect English grammar and academic style, are frequently getting posted by users who have just come back from a long break and who showed serious lack of English proficiency in previous answers.
@Super-intelligentShade aside from the moderation/trolling issue, please don't deliberately add noise to answers that should be edited out.
@EKanadily if the poster paraphrases the text and reviews and fixes any code samples, "mission freakin' accomplished" - that is then effectively the user's own content, and we don't have a reason to care about the process behind it. That said, in practice we have already spotted tons of blatantly AI-generated content, and suspended many users for it. There is, perhaps not surprisingly, very little overlap between people who want to use ChatGPT to write Stack Overflow answers, and people who care about the quality of the content they post.
@AKX and EKanadily did you guys miss the ;) emoji in my comment?...
Simply, it's not possible to know for sure. It'll become very much like the judicial system which gets most things right, but you would end up occasionally banning the wrong person. No suggestion here fixes that, and it'd be naive to think that people aren't still using ChatGPT now just smarter to get around the basic detection methods, and also naive to think that there haven't been posts falsely closed due to suspected AI tools.
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@DubDub fortunately those are all problems that we have existing solutions to, ;)
@KevinB not sure what you mean. The justice system is long and tedious, requiring a lot of work, isn't 100% effective. When you can spit out 60 answers in 10 minutes, who is willing to spend a few hours to go over them answers and check? When you can spit out 10 answers in an hour that are working and correct, but obviously chatgpt, that's going to take more than a few hours to try and validate ChatGPT has been used.
@DubDub When someone is banned, they receive a mod message they can respond to. If they truely were incorrectly banned, it's likely the ban will be reversed. It's important to remember users don't typically banned for a single post that looks like it was chatgpt generated, it's often 5 or more and reviewed by multiple people who've been reviewing these for months now. If users start paraphrasing the content as their own work and validating that the answers are correct, "Problem Solved."
@DubDub the speed issue has been mostly resolved via a throttle on posting answers for users under a certain amount of reputation, which in a sense helps such users "fly under the radar" for longer by reducing the damage they can cause. However, it only takes one detection for all of the previous answers to be reviewed... regardless of how much time passed between the answers.
@KevinB and that's great, but the rule is very black and white, so I take issue when people who are using ChatGPT the proper way are banned. "If they truly were incorrectly banned, it's likely the ban will be reversed" who decides this? A human who is humanely prone to error? How does the accused prove their innocence? Has to explain the way all their answers work?
No solution short of shutting the site down is 100% effective. Off topic questions from 2008 still exist today, unclosed. It's never been about having a 100% effective solution, we simply need a solution that is effective enough, and this one thus far has been. Do you see a deluge of people posting on meta complaining about being unfairly banned due to posting chatgpt answers?
I agree, but I think there are more effective solutions, and less effective solutions. A lot of people are proposing this ban stays permanent, but I think will actively harm SO as time goes on. Especially if these tools keep improving.

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