If HN policy disallows AI comments, why is linking to AI generated content ok?

13 points by ekelsen ↗ HN

7 comments

[ 2.8 ms ] story [ 23.2 ms ] thread
"Don't post generated comments or AI-edited comments. HN is for conversation between humans."
I think it should not be allowed, for logical consistency, if not for the sake of civility. If someone thought so little of their audience that they let an "AI" write and/or draw a post, it seems thoughtless to ask a human to waste their precious time reading it.
Content with a heavy smell of being AI generated already gets flagkilled. Vibecoded repos on GitHub don't strictly fall into that bucket since they can still provide functional utility.

Do you have a specific example of something that should not be allowed but did not get flagkilled?

Because having rules on HN comments means users adapt their writing to those rules. Whereas the same on external content means potentially missing out on interesting stuff. We've already seen big announcements being clearly AI generated.
Personally I don't mind AI content if it still reads like a human took some raw materials and sculpted - but a simple post is so low effort AI should not be rewarded here.
I think there's little point in making a policy against something that we already know people will ignore en masse, and which can't often be objectively enforced to begin with. This forum is at the epicenter of the industry that is trying to normalize AI generated content everywhere. People here want to read it and post it and talk about it and use it, and for better or worse AI maximalism is what tech culture is converging towards. As much as I agree with the stance against AI the intransigence of HN isn't going to stop it, there is only so much that site guidelines can do.
I understand your point, but I will say that many of the other policies also are not capable of being truly objectively enforced either ("I know it when I see it"). An effort could be made to define an approximate boundary.

Perhaps the moderator comment about "obvious smell" being killed is defining that line and the line allows lots of fairly obviously AI edited prose through. We've chosen a boundary and it's different from what I'd like (and think is best in the long run for humanity), but I will accept it and move on.