I know - viscerally - that y'all are shorthanded. I also know that things sometimes get dropped in your laps unexpectedly with little time to prepare, so I'm hoping that this was merely an oversight... but I'd have to echo Mithical's point, particularly as link-only answers are a core concern on the platform.
Y'all have, unfortunately, posted a link-only question, which relies on external links for all of the important content. This means you're expecting people to visit two different links and read long-ish posts that aren't written for this audience to get all of the information they need to understand and respond to this post.
I think we're all well aware that AI is an extremely contentious subject on the network and the core community have very strong concerns about it. I appreciate that you link to the February blog post about socially responsible AI but, again, summarizing the core ideas from that post in this context rather than linking to it alone would have given people much more community-centric context about the content in those two sources. Particularly since the MSE announcement of that post was similarly poorly received and few questions have been answered.
Right now I'm seeing a lot of concern about whether this means that y'all are more likely to override the rules about posting AI-generated content on sites or changing your thoughts about attribution. While these points are addressed in the Commitment blog post, I'm going to be honest - that post is written in a very indirect and unclear way, so I'd really appreciate a synopsis in simpler words. For example:
In addition, community answers should be derived from quality, accurate, sourced data.
On the surface, this is a very nice sentiment - one that we can all get behind. Unfortunately, it doesn't actually say that AI-generated answers can't be posted by community members, reviewed or not - if people assume AI generated content is "quality, accurate, sourced data" (it's not), then they will think it's fine. It's also unclear what "community answers" means - two very different interpretations are:
- Answers written by community members
- Answers on a Stack Exchange community site
The former leaves huge openings for AI-generated answers, since they're not created by community members and the prior (much clearer) statement about questions uses "community" to mean "community member" as opposed to "assisted and curated by AI", further leading to the former interpretation.
The full statement about questions is:
questions on Stack Overflow (whether by a community member or assisted and curated by AI) are posted only after human review.
Is possible to say something similarly definite about answers to indicate that the company commits to ensure all answers must at minimum have human review to ensure accuracy while ensuring that sites' communities have oversight to further restrict using these tools to answer questions?
It'd be really great if, now that the post is out and you are getting feedback of confusion and questions from community, if you could edit a community-focused explanation/overview of the two posts into the question so that a reader doesn't have to view the full press releases to understand what's happening.
To be clear, this isn't about specifics - it's about the most general big-picture things. You're building on a foundation that's not clear to the users, even if it's obvious to you. Perhaps you find what's been written in these posts to be crystal clear. You know what the company intends and that the interest in the community connection is genuine. The community doesn't know that.
You can dismiss my statements as me looking for the negative interpretation in everything. I've been there. I've struggled with people trying too hard to read into and over-analyze every word I've written and finding cracks when I'm trying to be open and honest. I know it's difficult. But that's why I spent time clarifying things rather than just brushing those concerns aside.
If you can't clearly and succinctly say things like, "We will not create or incorporate tools to automatically post answers using AI to the sites." and "We will discourage users from manually posting or converting AI-generated answers without human verification and review to the sites." - over and over until people actually start believing it, people will continue to look for indications that you're stating things in ways that allow you to point at your prior statements and say that you're not "technically" violating them.