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

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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?

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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

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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.

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(Edited)

Hello, for now, please report it as "spam".
We are going to create a separate category soon.
Thanks

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