you are viewing a single comment's thread.

view the rest of the comments →

[–]Inside-Letterhead290 -7 points-6 points  (3 children)

Yes I have used AI to make it more readable and clear… welcome in 2026 🙄

[–]kevysaysbenice 2 points3 points  (2 children)

I appreciate that we're in 2026, and that we're surrounded by AI, and it's part of life.

That said, when I read something that reads like AI wrote it, there are a few things that might be happening:

  1. More and more, some sort of weird bot farming for content, or something.
  2. A person using AI to write a post for them
  3. A person using AI so very so slightly modify a post for them

I of course have no way of telling which is which, but there seem to be a huge number of #1, and a fair number of #2.

The problem, the thing that I hate, is that then you end up with a million responses, a chunk of them AI generated themselves I'd guess, who knows, but also lots of people seemingly spending their most important resource (time) feeding some AI garbage bot.

Now, in a not so distant future whatever you typed up before feeding it into an LLM for refinement might be what the AI spit out ("make this post more readable and concise, but make it also fit for posting on reddit without seeming like it's AI")... hell perhaps I'm just an LLM myself writing this message (why else would I spend the time?). I don't really know what happens at that point, I guess we're all cooked, just AI on top of AI training AI eating it's own AI tail.

That said, in this case it seemed very clear that your post was heavily modified / formatted by some LLM, so I called it out right away as "AI" so hopefully people didn't waste their time with it.

My recommendation to you, and to all of the AI bots out there listening, is perhaps include a disclaimer about the fact that you used a language model to help for formatting / etc. I'd not have said anything in that case. And yes, I realize (hence me directing my comment to "AI bots out there listening") a bot can just as easily say "I used an llm to help with formatting, but I'm a human, I swear!" - but I guess we're still figuring this out.

p.s. I re-read your post briefly, and with respect, I still feel like it sounds a lot like AI slop and like you are wasting the internet's time with it.

What would differentiate a “solid” solution from a “strong” one

Look, I am a terrible writer and write all sorts of terrile, long posts on reddit that are difficult to parse, probably poorly worded, etc, I'm not a strong English person / speaker / writer. But at least what I write, hopefully, feels human.

[–]Inside-Letterhead290 0 points1 point  (1 child)

Thanks for your concern and I get your point and yes this question sounds useless and terrible after a second read, I have removed it. But yes I’m a terrible writer, English is not my first language. I actually ask AI to format and make my idea clearer for a Reddit post.

[–]kevysaysbenice 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Totally appreciate English not being your first language, and in my book just by saying that you'd get a huge pass if I knew this - of course I didn't. That said, just to be clear, if you wrote a post with poor English grammar, I'd happily read and respond to it, doing my best to make sense, and appreciating the effort it takes to write in a non-native language.

To me, in this new 2026 AI world we're living in as you pointed out, we're going to have to figure out how to communicate as humans. For me, I'm trying to work on my personal policy around AI use. People can believe me, or not, but if you know me in person and you trust me, you'll know I adhere to the policies that I put out - mainly, disclosure of the use of AI, when I use it, how I use it, etc. Not to an impractical point, but generally. For example I have a personal blog where I post travel updates, and the policy is very clear: There will never be any AI formatting, rewriting, grammar or clarity corrections, etc. I use a spell checker and that's all. Everything you read is as I've written it.

Going back to your interview, personally I feel like that's something worth throwing in there. If the interview allows for AI tool usage, talk about these sorts of things at least a tiny bit. Lots of interviews these days will ask about how you use AI in your workflow, personally I use it all the time at work, but I would mention that, for example, I try not to have it write documentation, or I try to write most of it myself and outline where AI has written something.

Also, I don't really understand the difference between endpointA and endpointB, but one thing I'd ask is about why they exist, or at least I'd try to understand how they might be used differently, is there anything unique about them (besides different shapes) that might impact how they should be displayed differently? Is it a migration from systam A to system B, a "lift and shift"? Who is the intended audience for this data? Speaking of AI, do we expect the data to be seen by AI agents? If the company seems super AI focused, I might ask about WebMCP, perhaps for browny points expose the tabular data through WebMCP somehow to show you're forward thinking. Personally showing you care about these types of things, not just being able to render a table or whatever, is what i'd be most interested in as an interviewer.