Comment by gruez
1 day ago
>Why? What's LLM generated? How can you tell?
Not the guy you're responding to, but:
1. The high number of (em) dashes is suspect, though it's unclear whether they manually replaced the em dashes or is actually human generated.
2. "One additional failure worth noting: one incident response professional in the HN thread, raised a concern that operates independently of the bot problem" feels out of place for a content marketing piece. HN isn't popular enough to be invoked as a source, and referencing it as "the HN thread" seems even weirder, as if the author prompted "write a piece about how google cloud defense sucks, here are some sources: ..."
3. This passage is also suspect because it follows the chained negation pattern, though it's n=1
>No hardware identifier is transmitted. No attestation is required. No certification layer determines who may participate.
edit:
I also noticed there are 2 other comments that are flagged/dead expressing their reasons.
> actually human generated
Human written, not generated.
> HN isn't popular enough to be invoked as a source
Excuse me, what do you mean there? The author happens to read HN too.
>Excuse me, what do you mean there? The author happens to read HN too.
Read the rest of the comment. It's not suspect because it's referencing HN, it's suspect because of the way it's referencing HN. Specifically, its use of the phrase "the HN thread", even though it wasn't mentioned before. Maybe it's a editing gaff, but it's also consistent with how an LLM would write if presented with a list of sources.
Yep, this feels like a smoking gun. The others are circumstantial, maybe indicative, maybe not. While there’s a chance this is an editing gaff, its overwhelmingly likely to be LLM, ahem, “cruft”.
Looks like the moderators are actively deleting comments that call out AI generated articles now. Grim. This comment will probably be deleted too.
What did you see that made you think that? (It's entirely untrue btw.)
We haven't said anything specific about genai articles but if you've seen https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47340079 it shouldn't be hard to extrapolate.
Both comments appeared as [dead] within a few minutes of being made, despite not appearing as [flagged].
They're visible now, but still. What caused them to appear as [dead] in the first place?
3 replies →
[flagged]
Quite the opposite. That user's comment was killed because it was classified as AI-generated. Of course it was a false positive due to the AI-generated text they quoted. These systems aren't foolproof. But we're very serious about preserving HN for curious conversation between humans.