Depends on the university policy. To me, I don't see any difference between certain AI use and plagiarism. And plagiarism ought to result in expulsion.
As an instructor, however, it is increasingly difficult being 100% certain someone is using an LLM. While the easy spot is usually shorter paragraphs and a final hedging paragraph (the one paragraph that OpenAI included so they won't be liable if shit goes south), there is still no way to be sure.
So instead, I just have to begrudgingly nod along as my engineering students dump awful, boring AI texts on me.
This season is a bit of a snoozer no doubt. Even 2020 was more fun because the rest of the field was so crazy tight that anyone could get a podium if one of the top 3 had a DNF.
This year the hierarchy is very obvious, so less chance for anything crazy or unexpected happening.
It's shrödinger's authoritarian Amazon most of the time.
Self-pub authors are terrified of the great hand of Amazon, meanwhile shit like this happens.
It seems like they do have quite an extensive review process, it just takes a long time. Resulting in legitimate authors being punished and bot farmers thriving, I guess.
As a writer, please check out booksprouts or other arc review sites. Indie authors need a ton of help with reviews and you get free books in exchange.
It's a fair exchange, and as someone that only recently got into indie pub books, many of them are actually much better than the indie reputation implies.
I mean to be fair, I imagine when communities were in blackout things were looking dire. I haven't been to reddit since, but I imagine things are pretty much back to normal? So it's clear he can sort of spit on the reddit userbase how much he wants. People will still come back.
Really makes you wonder what sort of operation they've been running at Williams.
Working in project management and even organizational communication, these feel like relatively simple issues to fix. Sure there is cost involved, but compared to producing a car, I feel like the costs would be relatively small.
It just seems like Williams neglected knowledge management. They wouldn't be the first company consisting of primarily engineers to completely ignore anything related to social science.
They're probably overpaying people that do not contribute a ton, eh? Makes me wonder how much the top brass in general earn.
This is clearly not scientifically true. Sure we can argue to what extent linguistic relativity is true, but to say it isn't true at all? That's a pretty hot take.
@SaucyGoodness
@lemmy.world