
"Please stop submitting AI slop code pull requests to RPCS3. We will start banning those who do without disclosing. There are plenty of resources online to learn how to debug and code instead of generating slop that you don't understand and that doesn't work."
"“Please stop submitting AI slop code pull requests to RPCS3. We will start banning those who do without disclosing,” stated RPCS3 in a post on . “There are plenty of resources online to learn how to debug and code instead of generating slop that you don't understand and that doesn't work.”"
"My favorite one was when someone asked how the team was certain they weren't rejecting human-written code, to which RPCS3 : “You can't possibly handwrite the type of shit AI slop we have been seeing.”"
RPCS3, an open-source PlayStation 3 emulator, asked users to stop submitting AI-generated “slop” code pull requests to its GitHub page. The team stated it would begin banning contributors who do not disclose AI involvement. The request emphasized that there are resources available to learn debugging and proper coding rather than generating code that is not understood and does not work. The team also responded to questions about how it could distinguish human-written code from AI output, asserting that the observed submissions could not plausibly be handwritten. The emulator has existed since 2011 and has reached a point where a large portion of the PlayStation 3 library is fully playable, supported by community contributions.
Read at Kotaku
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