Uhhh, ask me anything, I guess? This is the first I’m hearing of this guideline, as I missed the RFC, but it was published February 10, so I’m confused why 404 is suddenly reporting it now (edit: I was confusing it with the LLM translation guideline which they also link). 404 gets a subtle nuance wrong by calling it a “policy” rather than a “guideline”, which are technically different on Wikipedia, but it’s not worth splitting hairs for the general public.
Wikipedia editor, Ilyas Lebleu, who goes by Chaotic Enby on Wikipedia and who proposed the guideline
I’ve actually talked to them a few times before; they’re really cool.
Edit: Oh, okay, the article is actually discussing two guidelines. This one is what they’re mainly referring to. Speedy deletion criterion G15, a precursor to this, is related and says that articles predominantly created by an LLM without human oversight can be speedily deleted.
Uhhh, ask me anything, I guess? This is the first I’m hearing of this guideline, as I missed the RFC,
but it was published February 10, so I’m confused why 404 is suddenly reporting it now(edit: I was confusing it with the LLM translation guideline which they also link). 404 gets a subtle nuance wrong by calling it a “policy” rather than a “guideline”, which are technically different on Wikipedia, but it’s not worth splitting hairs for the general public.I’ve actually talked to them a few times before; they’re really cool.
Edit: Oh, okay, the article is actually discussing two guidelines. This one is what they’re mainly referring to. Speedy deletion criterion G15, a precursor to this, is related and says that articles predominantly created by an LLM without human oversight can be speedily deleted.