@Glorfindel Sorry for abusing superping, but you seem to be online and I wanted to briefly discuss your flags, if you're willing and available.
As an example to me this sounds more like Marketingese. But then, what I have seen from ChatGPT also often does (don't have access to it, because it requires a phone number to sign up).
@0xC0000022L no problem! I can't prove they're generated by ChatGPT, of course, and even if it was, and the user has the knowledge and took the time to validate the answer and provided attribution, then it's a fine answer in my book.
I don't know your site's policy on ChatGPT, and it varies between SE sites. If you think you can contact the user, sort things out, make sure the posts get attributed and they're not overly promoting their own product, fine with me.
@0xC0000022L we had some discussion in the TL and AFAIK only attribution is required (both by SE policy and the terms of usage of ChatGPT). The ban was necessary on Stack Overflow because of the volume vs. the number of caretakers (moderators and regular users) - I guess that's less of a problem on Reverse Engineering.
In case of the answer linked above at least the single spelling issue that stood out ("witch") speaks against "AI-generated". Could of course be an obfuscation technique of its own to disguise AI-generated content. So far all AI-generated stuff I got to see from ChatGPT was at least using correct spelling, albeit not always correct grammar.
@Glorfindel Got it. It would probably be less of an issue, yes. Alas, I had some colleagues at work "ask questions" to ChatGPT and all of the stuff that was related to reverse engineering the answers sounded legit, but if you did more than just read them (e.g. trying the "advice") it became clear very quickly that this AI was bullshitting very eloquently 😐
@0xC0000022L ... meaning that while the answers were quick and sounded legit at face value, upon closer inspection always turned out to be made up -- but very eloquently so.
The detector says 0% chance of being auto-generated, true. So maybe they do have some knowledge (more than I at least :P) and could be a valuable contributor to the site.
Very true, but also understandable given the majority of users probably aren't native speakers of English (nor am I). And even if they were, I know plenty of native speakers with worse grammar and spelling than I usually manage for English ;)
Side-note: here the affiliation has been disclosed.
Yeah, noticed that, hence I knew they were affiliated. I am not sure if their product is directly relevant to the question at hand, but if it is, then it's definitely in line with the rules for self-promotion.
@Glorfindel I guess at RE.SE it's more about deobfuscation than obfuscation -- which their product claims to do -- but it's still good to have an overview of the techniques and certainly the user seems to have some expertise in the subject matter.
@Glorfindel Indeed. Anyway, thanks for flagging and also for being available for a brief discussion regarding the flags. Appreciate it. Oh and I wish you a happy new year. I guess with less than 10 days into the new year it's still alright to say that ;)
Screenshot / Code Snippet
About
This script adds a link to each post, to check it against Hugging Faces' AI detector.
Download
The script can be installed via this link; source code can be found here.
Platform
Tested with Violentmonkey in Firefox on macOS, but it's likely to work on all brow...