got hit by a wave of slop prs last week so i guess it’s time to buckle down and spend my morning…
writing an ai policy
this looks-legitimate-but-trash slop reminds me of corporate phishing tests
the biggest tragedy for me is that i’ve spent A LOT of time and energy to encourage contributions to my projects and now i have to spend TBD energy on gate-keeping
@hynek the part I dislike the most is the pressure to include "instructions for agents" in contrib docs. I might do it (at the end, clearly delineated so that nobody has to read it) because it seems somewhat effective, but it feels inherently icky.
Also, I'm sure you've seen it, but the FastAPI policy seems closest to your vibe. Having done a lot of reading in this space, that one stands out for being short, clear, and friendly in tone.
@sirosen I'm moving ours into a separate file to not tone-poison the hopefully-welcoming contributing guide. and I honestly don't think with our guide there is a need for instructions for agents.
@hynek @sirosen I think if only for practical purposes in almost all jurisdictions it will be scenario 1 or 2 and no one likely to sue "small fries" over this, but if you think there is a real possibility of legal issues it might be worth trying to see if someone with legal expertise might be willing to come up with a more solid strategy for damage control (I would think this is something that would make sense to do in a standard way, like maybe the OSI or Creative Commons generates some standard boilerplate)
@pganssle @sirosen Sure, that’s why I’m also not making any bold claims. But also in the end I don’t want to be an ad carrier for trillion dollar companies that won’t sponsor me with even $5 / month. Yes I’m petty