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

  • imecth@fedia.io
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    12 hours ago

    GNOME manually reviews every extension, and they understandably don’t want to review AI generated code.

    • uncouple9831@lemmy.zip
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      5 hours ago

      Oh…an actually human response. How refreshing. At least one person here got their rabies shot.

      Do they actually review it or is it like how android and apple “review” apps? And why would they be reviewing the code rather than putting it through some test suite/virus scanning suite or something? That is, this shit isn’t going away any time soon even if the bubble pops, so why not find a way to avoid the work rather than ban people who make the work “too hard”?

        • uncouple9831@lemmy.zip
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          3 hours ago

          I’m calm, but since you need to hear it: nobody has ever in the history of the human race received the command to “calm down” and had it make them calmer. So chill out broski.

        • uncouple9831@lemmy.zip
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          4 hours ago

          Oof this just makes it so much worse. It sounds like they have two complaints:

          There are more extensions being made now. Good. If you can’t keep up, charge money to review them or something. Even charging 10 cents will drop submissions instantly.

          The extensions have unnecessary try/catch blocks. And it’s not just any try catch blocks that aren’t necessary…it’s only the ai-generated unnecessary try catch blocks. Human-generated unnecessary try/catch blocks are fine. This is dumb and a dumb example because it’s a structure whose behavior is well understood and well defined. I add unnecessary try/catch blocks to my code all the time if I don’t feel like digging in at the moment to figure out all of the failure modes of some function. It’s only when a LLM does it that it upsets the poster. Ridiculous.