Path: ...!news.nobody.at!weretis.net!feeder8.news.weretis.net!fu-berlin.de!uni-berlin.de!individual.net!not-for-mail From: Sylvia Else Newsgroups: sci.electronics.design Subject: Re: The end of stackoverflow? Date: Fri, 10 May 2024 15:16:21 +0800 Lines: 23 Message-ID: References: Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Trace: individual.net l6E7on7snGWbnskKLJmRAAmVdDcm//i1w40/ZprgDvHlfVfUiJ Cancel-Lock: sha1:RwxkEviIqm610UsV8qFvTejC4Ew= sha256:kvKw7/L3eQpqKN2kHDYTpXOotQvnCNVPiY6A1sQwr9o= User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:102.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/102.15.1 Content-Language: en-US In-Reply-To: Bytes: 1746 On 10-May-24 2:55 pm, Jan Panteltje wrote: > Stack Overflow users sabotage their posts after OpenAI deal > https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2024/05/stack-overflow-users-sabotage-their-posts-after-openai-deal/ > > The end of stack overflow? > > Personally I know companies are using my open sourced stuff.. > Let it be... > > I like Stackoverflow, it gave me many good answers in the past > to difficult questions... > Many highly qualified people there. > One often has to trawl through a number of suggested solutions, either because most of them are wrong (or at least wildly apocryphal), irrelevant, or because the same or similar symptoms can have many different underlying causes. I have to wonder whether a language model is really up to the task of filtering out the dross, while keeping the important parts. Sylvia.