frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Made with ♥ by @iamnishanth

Open Source @Github

fp.

Doing gigabit Ethernet over my British phone wires

https://thehftguy.com/2026/01/22/doing-gigabit-ethernet-over-my-british-phone-wires/
325•user5994461•8h ago•177 comments

Maze Algorithms (2017)

http://www.jamisbuck.org/mazes/
35•surprisetalk•22h ago•12 comments

How I Became a Quant (2007) [pdf]

https://engineering.nyu.edu/sites/default/files/2021-10/How_I_Became_a_Quant%20%281%29.pdf
50•sonabinu•5d ago•21 comments

Claude Code's new hidden feature: Swarms

https://twitter.com/NicerInPerson/status/2014989679796347375
101•AffableSpatula•4h ago•77 comments

Tao Te Ching – Translated by Ursula K. Le Guin

https://github.com/nrrb/tao-te-ching/blob/master/Ursula%20K%20Le%20Guin.md
81•andsoitis•1h ago•22 comments

Raspberry Pi Drag Race: Pi 1 to Pi 5 – Performance Comparison

https://the-diy-life.com/raspberry-pi-drag-race-pi-1-to-pi-5-performance-comparison/
7•verginer•41m ago•2 comments

December in Servo: multiple windows, proxy support, better caching, and more

https://servo.org/blog/2026/01/23/december-in-servo/
60•t-3•1h ago•1 comments

MS confirms it will give the FBI your Windows PC data encryption key if asked

https://www.windowscentral.com/microsoft/windows-11/microsoft-bitlocker-encryption-keys-give-fbi-...
251•blacktulip•5h ago•187 comments

Metriport (YC S22) is hiring a security eng to harden healthcare data infra

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/metriport/jobs/XC2AF8s-senior-security-engineer
1•dgoncharov•1h ago

How I Estimate Work as a Staff Software Engineer

https://www.seangoedecke.com/how-i-estimate-work/
263•mattjhall•8h ago•143 comments

Ask HN: Gmail spam filtering suddenly marking everything as spam?

17•goopthink•2h ago•39 comments

Many Small Queries Are Efficient in SQLite

https://www.sqlite.org/np1queryprob.html
122•tosh•7h ago•83 comments

Internet Archive's Storage

https://blog.dshr.org/2026/01/internet-archives-storage.html
248•zdw•4d ago•71 comments

I Like GitLab

https://www.whileforloop.com/en/blog/2026/01/21/i-like-gitlab/
151•lukas346•8h ago•96 comments

When employees feel slighted, they work less

https://penntoday.upenn.edu/news/penn-wharton-when-employees-feel-slighted-they-work-less
204•consumer451•4d ago•162 comments

Unrolling the Codex agent loop

https://openai.com/index/unrolling-the-codex-agent-loop/
417•tosh•22h ago•194 comments

C++26 Reflection loves QRangeModel

https://www.qt.io/blog/c26-reflection-qrangemodel
6•jandeboevrie•4d ago•1 comments

Are we all plagiarists now?

https://www.economist.com/culture/2026/01/22/are-we-all-plagiarists-now
72•pseudolus•2h ago•89 comments

JVIC: New web-based Commodore VIC 20 emulator

https://vic20.games/#/basic/24k
27•lance_ewing•6h ago•21 comments

Proof of Corn

https://proofofcorn.com/
451•rocauc•1d ago•294 comments

6 Years Building Video Players. 9B Requests. Starting Over

https://www.mux.com/blog/6-years-building-video-players-9-billion-requests-starting-over
25•bolp•4d ago•7 comments

“Let people help” – Advice that made a big difference to a grieving widow

https://www.npr.org/2026/01/20/nx-s1-5683170/let-them-the-small-bit-of-advice-that-made-a-big-dif...
133•NaOH•15h ago•47 comments

80386 Multiplication and Division

https://nand2mario.github.io/posts/2026/80386_multiplication_and_division/
84•nand2mario•12h ago•29 comments

Extracting verified C++ from the Rocq theorem prover at Bloomberg

https://bloomberg.github.io/crane/
106•clarus•4d ago•20 comments

US Vaccine Panel Chair Says Polio and Other Shots Should Be Optional

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/23/health/milhoan-vaccines-optional-polio.html
23•throw0101c•32m ago•4 comments

Gas Town's agent patterns, design bottlenecks, and vibecoding at scale

https://maggieappleton.com/gastown
378•pavel_lishin•1d ago•396 comments

Some C habits I employ for the modern day

https://www.unix.dog/~yosh/blog/c-habits-for-me.html
202•signa11•5d ago•131 comments

Show HN: Coi – A language that compiles to WASM, beats React/Vue

166•io_eric•3d ago•58 comments

Banned C++ features in Chromium

https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/main/styleguide/c++/c++-features.md
217•szmarczak•22h ago•216 comments

Traintrackr – Live LED Maps

https://www.traintrackr.co.uk/
87•recursion•5d ago•27 comments
Open in hackernews

Are we all plagiarists now?

https://www.economist.com/culture/2026/01/22/are-we-all-plagiarists-now
72•pseudolus•2h ago
https://archive.ph/SwLOD

Comments

geist67•2h ago
You’ve all been very silly with the idea of intellectual properties, copyright specifically.

Every generation throughout time has had the right to recreate the legacy of human thought through the filter of their own times.

“Cultural appropriation” and other knock off terms are objectively a part of every creative and functional cycle.

Give credit where credit is due, yet once let into the world a thought becomes a part of such wilds.

asmor•1h ago
The problem is really that we live in a system that demands we find commercially exploitable value in almost everything we do. If my main strategy for that involved a skill that generative AI could perfectly copy, including my style by invoking my name, I'd be pissed too.

Not to mention that when it comes to art, I'd rather consume something that someone deemed important and interesting enough to dedicate skill and time to.

iammjm•1h ago
When it comes to art, I'd rather consume something that is interesting/meaningful/beautiful/revolutionary/etc. It's all about the thing itself; it has always been. Less ego in all of this could actually be a good thing.
asmor•1h ago
I don't think I disagree strongly. But I also don't think generative AI tools will do that just based on how they're built. Everything they can do, someone probably did better from scratch.
mistrial9•1h ago
my point of view changed when I had to step over dying people to get into my new studio space --some famous artist
zozbot234•1h ago
There's plenty of commercially exploitable value in knowing that something was hand-crafted or even just endorsed by someone famous and impressive, and is not just a second-rate, mass-market knockoff. AI doesn't change that in any way. If it means that celebrated artists can now create even better art on an even broader scale, that's a commercial win for them. Plagiarism would not be an issue at all.
pixl97•1h ago
>The problem is really that we live in a system that demands...

The problem is a system of strong copyright laws isn't going to fix this system, and from everything we've seen is making it worse.

derektank•59m ago
>The problem is really that we live in a system that demands we find commercially exploitable value in almost everything we do.

Demands? Almost everything we do? I only spend 40-50 hours a week max doing labor that anybody would reasonably describe as being commercially exploited. No one’s broken down my door demanding I start making money on the visual novel I’m drafting in Ren’Py on the weekends, nor have I been castigated by my peers for throwing a party without charging an entrance fee.

dfxm12•57m ago
On top of this, Tech Bros want to capitalize on your talent like white bands covering Black artists during segregation.
coldtea•1h ago
Every generation throughout time didn't have to compete with massive instant access to everything ever written to facilitate plagiarism, or with AI generated slop...

And everything wasn't "content", nor did they have massive numbers of influencers and public content creators, nor was there was a push even for laymen to churn heaps of text every day or to project an image to the whole world.

And until recently if you got caught plagiarizing you were shamed or even fired from journalism. Now it's just business as usual...

pessimizer•1h ago
> “Cultural appropriation” and other knock off terms are objectively a part of every creative and functional cycle.

You'd think it was more complicated than that if the people who were doing a caricature of you had enslaved and murdered your family, and lived in the house your family built while you lived on the street.

It doesn't matter, because culture works how it works (and is often used as a political tool), and somehow world culture ends up being people pretending to be Americans pretending to be the descendants of American slaves. But it's undeniably ugly.

adityamwagh•1h ago
This account was created one hour we should ignore this comment. :)
MetaWhirledPeas•1h ago
There's a forced reframing going on of what it means to be an artist, and what it means to appreciate artistry. Over time we've developed the idea that art, once created, is not free for the observing; the artist has a right to compensation.

It's an understandable position for these reasons:

- We like art and we ant to show our support and appreciation for art

- The most straightforward way to show support and appreciation for art is to give the artist money

- Much of the art we appreciate was only possible due to the promise of monetary gain on the part of the artist

But there are some old, unavoidable questions:

- At what point does the pursuit of monetary gain begin to diminish one's own artistic expression?

- At what point does the pursuit of monetary gain begin to diminish other peoples' artistic expression?

As you point out, there is no art without appropriation and re-creation.

And now there are some new, unavoidable facts:

- Appropriation is becoming easier

- Attribution is therefore becoming more difficult

- Compensation is therefore becoming more difficult

- Rewinding the clock is impossible

The only way out of this would be for humanity to collectively take a puritanical stance on art, where any form of appropriation is demonized. I think this would make art suck.

mistrial9•1h ago
> Appropriation is becoming easier

my deck BBQ caught on fire, problem .. versus ... the 35,000 hectares next to my house is on fire with 20 meter tall flames

is "appropriation" now "easier" ? for whom, at what scale to deliver? at what scale to ingest ?

pixl97•1h ago
The analogies you're trying to connect are suspect at best.
bryanrasmussen•50m ago
>- The most straightforward way to show support and appreciation for art is to give the artist money

but it is quite notorious that people don't actually like doing that point, especially, I just have to point it out here, on HN. So...

At what point does the inability of monetary gain begin to diminish artistic expression?

mvdtnz•1h ago
"Cultural appropriation" is a totally separate issue to intellectual property and copyright. You're muddying the waters by conflating the two.

Cultural appropriation was a term popularised in the heady days of woke excesses when white liberals were desperate to find reasons to be mad at one another for perceived impurity. It's a ludicrous concept from top to bottom.

Intellectual property laws, in my opinion, have a place in our society.

mock-possum•1h ago
This kind of “oh everybody does it” dismissiveness towards cultural appropriation comes off as possibly ignorant but awfully insensitive. What is your understanding of the term? What does it describe, and when people use it as a negative, what legitimate issues are they concerned about?
pinnochio•1h ago
Call me when OpenAI gives away all its intellectual property for free.
larodi•37m ago
We are all plagiarists the moment we touch AI
telliott1984•1h ago
I really don't know how I feel about that Ctrl/Control joke.
zeroonetwothree•36m ago
It’s classic Economist humor
rectang•1h ago
Cutting back the power of creators dramatically increases the power of distributors. Do we really want the vast majority of economic benefit for human creativity to flow to middlemen?
cmrdporcupine•1h ago
That's been the trend, yes.

Look how much power lies in the hands of people who lie between petroleum in the ground and its combustion. It's a whole waterfall and the majority of the "wealth" in society seems to consist of people who're spinning their wheels from siphoning from it. And now they're terrified it'll go away.

The AI "gold rush" really has this feeling. "How can I get my finger in the pie somewhere here?"

"All that is solid melts into air"

fc417fc802•1h ago
> How can I get my finger in the pie somewhere here?

Given the performance of open weight models to date it looks as though that might prove fairly difficult in the medium to long term.

wizzwizz4•1h ago
And strengthening copyright causes the distributors to assign themselves the new copyrights in take-it-or-leave-it contracts. Making author's rights non-transferable (as in, e.g., Germany) goes some way to preventing this.
jryio•1h ago
Think about how it feels when you toil on a hard problem, do your best work, release it to the work in the spirit of openness and sharing

Only to have a machine ingest, compress, and reiterate your work indefinitely without attribution.

mock-possum•1h ago
Are those feelings serving you?

What consideration do you choose to afford to those feelings?

spicyusername•1h ago

    Only to have a machine ingest, compress, and reiterate your work indefinitely without attribution.
Further facilitating millions, or even billions, of other people to discover new ideas and create new things. It's not hard to see the benefit of that.

I get that the purpose of IP laws are psychological, rather than moral. A culture where people feel as though they can personally benefit from their work is going to have higher technological and scientific output, which is certainly good, even if the means of producing that good are sort of artificial and selfish.

It's not hard to imagine, or maybe dream of, a world where the motivation for research and development is not just personal gain. But we have to work with the world we have, not the world we want, don't we...

Nobody will starve themselves, even if doing so will feed hundreds of others.

fc417fc802•1h ago
> the purpose of IP laws are psychological, rather than moral.

Neither. They are purely economic. You even acknowledge this when you call out personal benefit.

The stated intent is to facilitate creators realizing economic benefits from time spent creating. The reality is that large corporations end up rent seeking using our shared cultural artifacts. Both impacts are economic in nature.

spicyusername•55m ago
Right, right.

The economic benefit is derived from a psychological effect: the expectation of personal gain.

The economy as a whole benefits from technological progress. The technological progress is fueled by each individual's expectation of personal gain. The personal gain is created via IP law.

fc417fc802•32m ago
If someone shows up to work based on the expectation that they will receive a paycheck at the end of the month would you also describe that as a psychological effect? I certainly wouldn't. That's an economic activity.

There's a psychological component regarding trust. Either that your employer would never try to cheat you or alternatively that your employer is the sort that might try to cheat you but won't thanks to our society's various systems. But the showing up to work itself is a simple exchange of time and skill for money.

Davidzheng•57m ago
I would be fine with it personally. But I'm a mathematician not an artist.
spudlyo•29m ago
> Only to have a machine ingest, compress, and reiterate your work indefinitely without attribution.

Everything I write, every thought I have, and the output of my every creative endeavor is profoundly shaped by the work of others that I have ingested, compressed, and iterated on over the course of my lifetime, yet I have the audacity to call it my own. Any meager success I may have I attribute to naught but my own ingenosity.

sowbug•12m ago
You are conflating work and work product. There's a difference between being acknowledged and compensated for doing hard work, and receiving property rights over the work product.

If you are an employee, you get paid for building something (work), and the employer owns the thing that was built (work product). If you are self-employed, it's the other way around. You don't get paid for the work, but you own the work product. Employees generally don't work for free, and the self-employed generally don't give away their capital for free.

If you opt to "release it to the [world] in the spirit of openness and sharing," then you built capital for free and gave it away for free. If you didn't want others to capitalize on the capital, then why did you give it away?

If you want attribution, then either get paid for the work and add it to your resume, or exchange your work product for attribution (e.g., let people visit the Jryio Museum, build a Jryio brand, become known in your community as a creative leader, etc.). If you give it away for free, then your expectations should include the possibility that people will take it for free.

mbanerjeepalmer•1h ago
> Universities are increasingly turning to AI to spot AI-written work (even as students use services like Dumb it Down to make their AI-fuelled work sound more believable). It can be detected. Chris Caren, the boss of Turnitin, a popular plagiarism detector, describes plagiarised prose as “beige”: “well-written, but not very dynamic”. It has verbal tics: it is keen on dreary words like “holistic” and notably keen on “notably”.

I don't think you can say that AI-written can be reliably detected. Turnitin is only ~90% effective: https://teaching.temple.edu/sites/teaching/files/media/docum...

j45•1h ago
What would be high enough? I agree 90% isn't perfect, but neither are LLMs.
jimbob45•1h ago
If I get AI to generate an essay and rewrite every word with my own whilst keeping the same general meaning of the original text, surely there’s no reasonable way to detect that, right?

I mean, the solution is just in-class-only essays, right? Or to stop with the weird obsession with testing and just focus on actually teaching.

kiba•46m ago
Just don't grade essay? Make it clear that eassy are optional and not required to get a grade, but it's a good way to learn. That will cut down the amount of work to be done too.

They failing exams because they don't do the work is on them.

Etherlord87•1h ago
What can you do with 90%? Accuse people of plagiarism and ignore the fact you will hurt 10% of innocent people, while still allowing 10% of cheaters? Of course there's ambiguity in the "accuracy" term, but I assumed you can be inaccurate in both directions.
wasabi991011•1h ago
> Of course there's ambiguity in the "accuracy" term, but I assumed you can be inaccurate in both directions.

The linked article breaks it down. The measured false positive rate is essentially 0 in this small study.

jtbayly•1h ago
Actually, you're allowing a much higher percentage of cheaters if you read the paper. They optimized to avoid false accusations. It's only ~45-75% accurate at detecting AI writing. It's closer to 90% accurate at detecting human writing. Half the cheaters get through, and you still fail 10 percent of the people who didn't cheat.
wasabi991011•1h ago
> It's closer to 90% accurate at detecting human writing.

I know that's what they wrote, but I heavily disagree. It got 28/30 (93%) correct, but out of the two it got "wrong":

- one was just straight up not rated because the file format was odd or something

- the other got rated as 11% AI-written, which imo is very low. I think teachers would consider this as "human-written", as when I was being evaluated with Turnitin that percentage of "plagiarism" detected would have simply been ignored.

j45•58m ago
At this point the most basic users of could be easily picked off and that style and list will grow yearly.
jtbayly•1h ago
Are you going to fail 10% of students who did their own work because they supposedly cheated? What exactly can you do with this 90% accurate judgment from a black box? Perhaps not let them out on bail?
wasabi991011•1h ago
> Are you going to fail 10% of students who did their own work because they supposedly cheated?

The linked article analyzes their data into more detail. In particular, the measured false positive rate is essentially 0 in this small study.

hannasanarion•41m ago
No, read the paper. They're going to pass 10% of students who cheated. The 90% figure is the false negative rate, how many AI essays it says are human.

The false positive rate is 0. The tool *never* says human writing is AI.

pinkmuffinere•1h ago
> [can’t] be reliably detected… only ~90% effective

I’m surprised to see these comments in conjunction, 90% is pretty good, and much higher than i expected. I wonder what’s the breakdown of false positives/false negatives

Edit: from the linked paper

> Of the 90 samples in which AI was used, it correctly identified 77 of them as having >1% AI generated text, an 86% success rate. The fact that the tool is more accurate in identifying human-generated text than AI-generated text is by design. The company realized that users would be unwilling to use a tool that produced significant numbers of false positives, so they “tuned” the tool to give human writers the benefit of the doubt.

This all seems exceptionally reasonable. Of the samples with AI, they correctly identify 86%. Of the samples without AI, they correctly identify a higher proportion, because of the nature of their service. This implies that if they _wanted_ to make a more balanced AI detection tool, they could get that 86% somewhat higher.

wasabi991011•1h ago
You can read the linked article, they break down their analysis in detail. Seems like low false positives at least.

Edit: thanks for doing so

michaelt•1h ago
> I’m surprised to see these comments in conjunction, 90% is pretty good, and much higher than i expected.

What standard of proof is appropriate to expel someone from college? After they've taken on, say, $40,000 of debt to attend?

Assuming you had a class of 100 students, "90% effective" would mean expelling 10 students wrongly - personally I'd expect a higher standard of proof.

obidee2•1h ago
Anyone expelling a student over a single “ai” label from turnitin alone is a complete idiot. Perhaps that happens occasionally, but that’s clearly the result of horrible decision making that isn’t really turnitins fault.

Anyone who gives 10 seconds of thought to how this could help realizes at 90% it’s a helpful first pass. Motivated students who really want to hide can probably squeak past more often than you’d like. And you know there will be false positives so you do something like: * review those more carefully, or send it to a TA if you have one to do so * keep track of patterns of positives from each student over time * explain to the student it got flagged, say it’s likely a false positive, and have them talk over the paper in person

I’m sure decent educators can figure out how to use a tool like that. The bad ones are going to cause stochastic headaches for their students regardless.

hannasanarion•43m ago
That's not what 90% effective means. Tests don't work that way.

Tests can be wrong in two different ways, false positive, and false negative.

The 90% figure (which people keep rounding up from 86% for some reason, so I'll use that number from now on) is the sensitivity, or the abitity to not have false negatives. If there are 100 cheaters, the test will catch 86 of them, and 14 will get away with it.

The test's false positive rate, how often it says "AI" when there isn't any AI, is 0%, or equivalently, the test's "specificity" is 100%

> Turnitin correctly identified 28 of 30 samples in this category, or 93%. One sample was rated incorrectly as 11% AI-generated[8], and another sample was not able to be rated.

The worst that would have happened according to this test is that one student out of 30 would be suspected of AI generating a single sentence of their paper. None of the human authored essays were flagged as likely AI generated.

geraldwhen•42m ago
Expulsions don’t happen. International students have been cheating rampantly for decades. Universities are happy enough to collect their tuition.
technothrasher•33m ago
My son, who just finished his first semester at college, said the thing that surprised him the most was the blatant cheating all around him. He said it is rampant and obvious, and the professors don't seem all that eager to punish it. It pisses him off, because it puts him at a disadvantage because he doesn't want to cheat.
101008•1h ago
I tried a lot of these tools, including Turnitin, and I think they are all wrong. Not because they are a bad implementation, but just because the problem is naturally impossible in a lot of cases.

There are people whose style is closer to AI, that doesn't mean they used AI. And sometimes AI outputs text that look like a human would write.

There is also the mix: if I write two pages and I used two sentences by AI (because I was tired and I couldn't find the right sentence), I may be flagged for using AI. Even worse, if I ask AI for advice and then I rewrite it myself, what would be the output? I can make a reasoning that both (AI written and not AI written) would be wrong.

hannasanarion•38m ago
> There is also the mix: if I write two pages and I used two sentences by AI (because I was tired and I couldn't find the right sentence), I may be flagged for using AI.

None of these tools are binary. They give a percentage score, a confidence score, or both.

If you include one ai sentence in a 100 sentence essay, your essay will be flagged as 1% AI and nobody will bat an eye.

101008•32m ago
They are not binary but the score isn't linear in my experience either. It isn't that they assign a score to each sentence and then do an aggregation.
hannasanarion•5m ago
It's not, but the fact that one sentence deserves a high score doesn't automatically mean that entire thing will flag false positive. Unless it's like, two sentences in total.
lysace•1h ago
Educators have been wrong about things like these for a long time. My teacher in 7th grade shamed me in class for using too many complex words for my age in an essay, so clearly I must have been cheating, somehow. (Late 80s.)
wasabi991011•1h ago
Honestly reading that article made me more less worried about AI-detection. My main concern is false positives (incorrectly identifying a human-written text as AI-written), but it seems Turnitin got that close to 0.

Of course the sample size is fairly small, I would want a larger scale study to see if the false positive rate is actually 5%, or 1%, 0.1%, 0.000001%, etc.

pinkmuffinere•1h ago
+1, i feel they’ve done a pretty good job, and have balanced the trade offs well
mig39•1h ago
I take suspicious student papers and feed them to Turnitin, as well as the popular LLMs. Hey ChatGTP, give me a report on the likelihood that this paper was generated by an LLM. Do that with Gemini, Claude, etc.

Then if there's a high probability, I look through the references in the paper. Do they say what the student attributes to them?

Finally, if I still think it's AI-generated, I have the student in and ask questions about the paper. "You said this here in this paragraph -- what do you mean by that?"

AI detectors are a first-pass, but I think a human really needs to be in the loop to evaluate whether it's cheating, or just using something to clean up grammar and spelling.

rdiddly•1h ago
Yeah, and to be blunt, beige and not dynamic is how I would describe most student writing done entirely by the human. I just don't see how a model, trained on a vast corpus of such writing, could ever be successfully and reliably distinguished from human writing. You can distinguish good writing from so-so writing, that's about it.

In an educational context, the only purpose of the writing has traditionally been learning, and the purpose of turning it in has been to prove that the learning took place. Both of those are out the window now. Classroom discussion and oral presentations might be the only place you can still prove learning took place. Until everybody gets hidden AI-powered earpieces of course.

hannasanarion•33m ago
> Turnitin is only ~90% effective:

No it isn't. Stop.

The cynical part of me says that the people who share this link with that summary are the cheaters trying to avoid getting caught, on the basis of the fact that they are patently abusing the numbers presumably because they didn't pay attention in math class.

The tests are 90% SENSITIVE. That means that of 100 AI cheaters, 10 won't be caught.

The paper you linked says the tests are 100% SPECIFIC. That means they will *never* flag a human-written paper as mostly AI.

Ekaros•31m ago
Turnitin is in weird spot. And probably impossible one. Academic writing is trained to be academic writing. With mesta text and phrases. And students and writers tend to follow conventions they see in other academic texts. As do AI.

On some level the human output in academic setting is expected to be well formulaic in way AI generated text is.

Which often could lead to false positives.

coldtea•1h ago
No, speak for yourselves.
add-sub-mul-div•1h ago
We spend a lot of time talking about the fairness of how LLMs are trained but not enough time talking about the fact that mediocre people now have a faucet they can turn on to flood work and content into the world effortlessly at volume.
xandrius•1h ago
Here is my very simple view:

- exact reuse of a long-ish word sequence(s) without credits -> not cool.

- complete/partial reinterpretation of an already existing story in different words -> it's fine

- Traced/almost identical image/drawing/painting (with the intent to fool someone) -> not cool

- Visual imitation in style/content but different approach or usage -> it's fine

I think people are too attached by the novelty of something, sure if I write a bunch of words and you repeat them as yours, that's not cool. But if something I make inspires someone and they take it, reframe it, rephrase it or whatever, go ahead.

People adore Star Wars, which is an absolute one to one of a hero's journey, it still has value. Most modern fantasy are basically fanfics of Middle Earth, still good that they exist.

Imagine someone just spamming sequences of notes at random for their whole life, does it mean they own anything else made here afterwards +70/80/90... Years?

alansaber•1h ago
I think this is correct, and that it's school (which with good intentions) overemphasises the importance of complete originality
SoftTalker•1h ago
It's less about originality than crediting sources.

If I restate something using completely my own words, I'm still supposed to cite the source where I got the idea.

If something is completely my own invention, and I didn't use any sources to create it, then that's original and I don't need to credit anyone else. But that's very rare.

yulker•40m ago
how do you account for the compilation of your insight that was formed through the consumption of many prior examples? do you feel compelled to thoroughly cite them, or have they crossed a threshold marked through your ability to now generate new similar things without directly referencing them that it's "all original you" now?
SoftTalker•35m ago
Yeah there's some grey area there I guess. But it took me quite a while as a student to understand that I needed to cite sources even if I was "using my own words" and not quoting passages verbatim.

Certainly there are styles and broad arcs that many creations follow that are not directly attributable to a specific source.

danaris•21m ago
If you're writing an academic/research paper, you still have to find something to cite.

"I know this stuff, just trust me" isn't a valid citation. The point is to give anyone who reads the paper a way to a) verify that each fact you put in the paper has solid academic sourcing, and b) find more information about it if they wish.

If you know a lot of stuff about the topic already, that's great—but unless you've already written and published papers on the subject, you can't just cite yourself.

Ekaros•36m ago
Also at some point citing is not needed. If I use addition I do not need to cite relevant parts of for example Principia Mathematica.

In the end hard lines are very hard.

mock-possum•1h ago
Everything Is A Remix.

Producing something entirely novel in an act of pure creativity is essentially a tall tale - like Newton and the Apple - possibly some truth to it, but definitely mythologized.

conception•47m ago
I don’t think this is entirely correct mutants exist. Everyone while in nature something goes wrong. Something random happens. You get something novel and new. This happens and creativity as well so most things are remix but entirely new novel things do exist because the world is not static it is random
altmanaltman•42m ago
> People adore Star Wars, which is an absolute one to one of a hero's journey, it still has value.

Yeah but A Hero's Journey is not a literal story, it's more of a framework written in a book called "The Hero With a Thousand Faces" for what makes a story interesting and how various original stories like myths, folklore etc (like the Bible) always followed the same pattern.

The author dissected that pattern, and then it has been followed by many writers/creators for what is considered to be a good model of a story. Screenwriting classes literally teach it, along with other stuff like The Three Act structure etc.

And if you really look into, almost all good stories follow that pattern to some extent, but it is the implementation that makes each story special.

It's like a bit like saying "People adore [x] webapp which is an absolute one to one of React, it still has value" but both are fundamentally different things.

Lerc•32m ago
The law broadly agrees with you here.

Non transformative use -> Not cool.

Transformative -> it's fine

Original work attempting to deceive or confuse the origin as being by another. -> not cool

Original work emulating the style of another without attempting to imply involvement of the other -> it's fine.

renewiltord•1h ago
Something I found disappointing is discovering what plagiarists the ancient greats were. Take Paradise Lost for instance. The entire thing is unoriginal and fan fiction derivative work of the Bible (itself questionable)

Of Mans First Disobedience, and the Fruit Of that Forbidden Tree, whose mortal taste…

Ummm, excuse me. This is literally the garden of Eden. In fact this idiot plagiarizes the name too. He actually calls this Eden. wtf. Fake as fuck. And people call this copy-paste artist who cites literally zero of his sources a “poet”.

mock-possum•1h ago
Honey there ain’t nothing new under the sun.
renewiltord•1h ago
Umm excuse me. Are you going to use an LLM to plagiarize or are you going to cite that?
amelius•1h ago
Good artists copy, great artists steal.

-- me

beardyw•1h ago
Here's question, if nobody had ever written science fiction, would AI do it.

I don't think so.

hannasanarion•27m ago
Science fiction is as old as fiction. The Epic of Gilgamesh (2000BC) and Ramayana (500BC) have sci-fi elements. There's nothing innovative or unique about stories that imagine a future instead of a past, present, or alternate reality.

Genres are too vague and generic to be ownable by anybody. Inspiration is not plagiarism.

boznz•6m ago
As far as I am aware AI wont write/do anything without an input prompt.. or has something changed ?
mikelitoris•1h ago
Wow, I love the illustration!
Nifty3929•28m ago
Without arguing the broader topic, I do think there's an important distinction between plagiarism in fiction and non-fiction or academic work: The theft of ideas

In fiction, taking ideas (hero's journey, middle earth, etc)[1] and adapting to a new story/characters is totally fine without attribution. There's probably only like 5 stories ever that just keep getting re-written this way.

But in non-fiction, academic research and the like, stealing ideas without attribution is a problem, because ideas are the whole point. Nobody reads a research paper for the plot.

But in school, and especially with non-fiction, we're so often told to "just re-word it to make it your own" which is actually the most insidious form of plagiarism. If I get an idea from you and want to include that in my paper, that's great, but I have to give you credit. Great non-fiction books I've read are riddled with citations and have 100-page bibliographies. The value of the book/paper is (often) in the synthesis of those ideas into something new, with maybe it's own ideas added on top. But "re-wording" does not make and idea your own, and does not escape a charge of plagarism.

[1] top comment as of this writing

crazygringo•6m ago
> But in school, and especially with non-fiction, we're so often told to "just re-word it to make it your own" which is actually the most insidious form of plagiarism.

I think you might be confused, or had unclear teachers.

You're told to re-word it but still cite it. There are different combinations here:

1. Copy verbatim, no quotes, cite. Plagiarism, because you're copying the wording without quoting (even though you're citing).

2. Copy verbatim, quote, cite. Correct.

3. Paraphrase, no quotes, cite. Correct.

4. Paraphrase, no quotes, don't cite. Plagiarism if not "common knowledge".

Teachers (should) be telling you to do 3 rather than 1. You are maybe confusing 3 with 4, thinking they were telling you to do 4?

But the difference between 3 and 4 can actually get legitimately confusing in certain cases, even for academics, because there are a lot of ideas that are just "in the air" and it's not always clear if something is "common knowledge" or if there's some original citation for it somewhere.

tiku•3m ago
I've built a react invoicing tool, I can't help but think that it probably ripped of a bunch of code. I've added my own touch now but it seems like it was wat faster with generation.but then again, it's hardly rocket science.