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RE: The Problem with AI-Generated Blog Posts on Hive (and My Proposed Solution)

in Proof of Brainlast year (edited)

Any accounts that we discover to engage in this type of fraud get blacklisted and receive more severe appeals than normal.
We have blacklisted dozens of accounts in the last 3 weeks. A few with reputations over 70.
"farhansadik2" is just a petty scammer in comparison to others.
Abusers evidently thought that such content is undetectable (none of them mentioned the use of AI article generators).

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What else do you guys watch out for so I can avoid doing damage to everything I have worked for over my time being on hive?

I think maybe HiveWatchers treats the kind of precise details you might want to know as something of a trade secret so users don't try to fly under their radar. Generally what's going to get someone in trouble is pretty obvious and if you treat Hive like it's a college and know what a college's standard academic honesty policy would be you should be fine. Don't plagiarize (including self-plagiarism), don't impersonate somebody else, don't threaten anyone, ect. Hive has a Terms of Service )Tos) so if you haven't already reviewed it you should go to https://hive.blog/tos.html.

Alternatively, since ChatGPT is a tool you can ask ChatGPT to outline Hive's ToS to get the general gist. Just don't go one extra step and copy-paste it for a blog post title "An Introduction to Good Behavior on Hive for Newbies."

Image Source: https://chat.openai.com/chat

I think I've identified another ChatGPT "petty scammer" in the MemeHive community. When reporting on hivewatchers.com about AI-generated content should I select Copy/Paste, Plagiarism, or Other? It's similar to @farhansadik2's AI content masking burying AI content behind some original beginning text.