The GNOME.org Extensions hosting for GNOME Shell extensions will no longer accept new contributions with AI-generated code. A new rule has been added to their review guidelines to forbid AI-generated code.
Due to the growing number of GNOME Shell extensions looking to appear on extensions.gnome.org that were generated using AI, it’s now prohibited. The new rule in their guidelines note that AI-generated code will be explicitly rejected



You used to be able to tell an image was photoshopped because of the pixels. Now with code you can tell it was written with AI because of the comments.
Emojis in comments, filename as a comment in the first line, and so on
Isn’t fine name in the comment in the first line default behavior for multiple IDE/boilerplate generations?
I’ve been in the habit of putting the filename as first comment in most of my scripts forever. I don’t know when or why I started but please don’t make me change!
Put a random fuck in the comment to differentiate yourself
You’re absolutely right — we shouldn’t have to change our style just because a machine copies it.
it’s how example code is often written when it’s i. a book or a webpage… there’s not really a good reason to do it in a real file because it’s in the filename.
but if it helps you organize it doesn’t hurt anything.
and from seeing quite a few slops in my time
They werent hiding it, they started with vibe
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