That comment didn't read like AI generated content to me. It made useful points and explained them well. I would not expect even the best of the current batch of LLMs to produce an argument that coherent.
This sentence in particular seems outside of what an LLM that was fed the linked article might produce:
> What's wild is that nothing here is exotic: subdomain enumeration, unauthenticated API, over-privileged token, minified JS leaking internals.
The users' comment history does read like generic LLM output. Look at the first lines of different comments:
> Interesting point about Cranelift! I've been following its development for a while, and it seems like there's always something new popping up.
> Interesting point about the color analysis! It kinda reminds me of how album art used to be such a significant part of music culture.
> Interesting point about the ESP32 and music playback! I've been tinkering with similar projects, and it’s wild how much potential these little devices have.
> We used to own tools that made us productive. Now we rent tools that make someone else profitable. Subscriptions are not about recurring value but recurring billing
> Meshtastic is interesting because it's basically "LoRa-first networking" instead of "internet with some radios attached." Most consumer radios are still stuck in the mental model of walkie-talkies, while Meshtastic treats RF as an IP-like transport layer you can script, automate, and extend. That flips the stack:
> This is the collision between two cultures that were never meant to share the same data: "move fast and duct-tape APIs together" startup engineering, and "if this leaks we ruin people's lives" legal/medical confidentiality.
The repeated prefixes (Interesting point about!) and the classic it's-this-not-that LLM pattern are definitely triggering my LLM suspicions.
I suspect most of these cases aren't bots, they're users who put their thoughts, possibly in another language, into an LLM and ask it to form the comment for them. They like the text they see so they copy and paste it into HN.
It's probably a list of bullet points or disjointed sentences fed to the LLM to clean up. Might be a non-English speaker using it to become fluent. I won't criticize it, but it's clearly LLM generated content.
That was literally the same thought that crossed my mind. I agree wholeheartedly, accusing everything and everyone of being AI is getting old fast. Part of me is happy that the skepticism takes hold quickly, but I don't think it's necessary for everyone to demonstrate that they are a good skeptic.
(and I suspect that plenty of people will remain credulous anyway, AI slop is going to be rough to deal with for the foreseeable future).
Yeah, you have a point... the comment - and their other comments, on average - seem to fit quite a specific pattern. It's hard to really draw a line between policing style and actually recognising AI-written content, though.
What makes you think that? it would need some prompt engineering if so since ChatGPT won't write like that (bad capitalization, lazy quoting) unless you ask it to
We finally have a blog that no one (yet) has accused of being ai generated, so obviously we just have to start accusing comments of being ai. Can't read for more than 2 seconds on this site without someone yelling "ai!".
For what it's worth, even if the parent comment was directly submitted by chatgpt themselves, your comment brought significantly less value to the conversation.
It's the natural response. AI fans are routinely injecting themselves into every conversation here to somehow talk about AI ("I bet an AI tool would have found the issue faster") and AI is forcing itself onto every product. Comments dissing anything that sounds even remotely like AI is the logical response of someone who is fed up.
tomhow|2 months ago
We detached this subthread from https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46137863 and marked it off topic.
simonw|2 months ago
This sentence in particular seems outside of what an LLM that was fed the linked article might produce:
> What's wild is that nothing here is exotic: subdomain enumeration, unauthenticated API, over-privileged token, minified JS leaking internals.
Aurornis|2 months ago
> Interesting point about Cranelift! I've been following its development for a while, and it seems like there's always something new popping up.
> Interesting point about the color analysis! It kinda reminds me of how album art used to be such a significant part of music culture.
> Interesting point about the ESP32 and music playback! I've been tinkering with similar projects, and it’s wild how much potential these little devices have.
> We used to own tools that made us productive. Now we rent tools that make someone else profitable. Subscriptions are not about recurring value but recurring billing
> Meshtastic is interesting because it's basically "LoRa-first networking" instead of "internet with some radios attached." Most consumer radios are still stuck in the mental model of walkie-talkies, while Meshtastic treats RF as an IP-like transport layer you can script, automate, and extend. That flips the stack:
> This is the collision between two cultures that were never meant to share the same data: "move fast and duct-tape APIs together" startup engineering, and "if this leaks we ruin people's lives" legal/medical confidentiality.
The repeated prefixes (Interesting point about!) and the classic it's-this-not-that LLM pattern are definitely triggering my LLM suspicions.
I suspect most of these cases aren't bots, they're users who put their thoughts, possibly in another language, into an LLM and ask it to form the comment for them. They like the text they see so they copy and paste it into HN.
samdoesnothing|2 months ago
snapdeficit|2 months ago
rootusrootus|2 months ago
(and I suspect that plenty of people will remain credulous anyway, AI slop is going to be rough to deal with for the foreseeable future).
Conasg|2 months ago
snapcaster|2 months ago
lazide|2 months ago
samdoesnothing|2 months ago
syndacks|2 months ago
koumou92|2 months ago
vkou|2 months ago
The point you raised is both a distraction... And does not engage with the ones it did.
jfindper|2 months ago
For what it's worth, even if the parent comment was directly submitted by chatgpt themselves, your comment brought significantly less value to the conversation.
probably_wrong|2 months ago