Clearly, that was because this information directly supports readers following through on the call to action: “And if Ruby Central does not do this we must pressure sponsors to stop funding Ruby Central”. That’s obvious.
> What's with the "contingent on employment status or ideological alignment" bit about? That's not been mentioned anywhere else so far.
Yes, both the original pdf and the RubyCentral statement edplicitly refer to admin status being made contingent on being full-time employee of RubyCentral. If you just mean no one has explicitly brought upthe ideological angle, well, that’s a fairly easy concer to reach wrih something being contingent on employment at a particular nonprofit, so it would be weird to interogate like this even if you had clearly focussed on kn just that point.
The cancellation of DHH's keynote was purely political. At that time, RubyCentral's response was similarly uncommunicative and their explanation was BS.
This is not the first strike.
The paragraph immediately preceding the list begins with a sentence mentioning the sponsors. How did you not see this?
> What's with the "contingent on employment status or ideological alignment" bit about? That's not been mentioned anywhere else so far.
“not been mentioned anywhere else” is false. If you click on the PDF linked to in this very post it mentions that only full time employees of RubyCentral maintained access to their GitHub account.
I find it ironic that you’re so quick to question whether something is LLM-authored given that you write so much about using LLMs.
I don't mind if it's LLM-assisted text if everything in it is a reviewed and accurate representation of the point the author is trying to make.
But if the LLM throws in extra junk tha distracts from the conversation and the author fails to catch that in review, that's bad.
I think it's likely I was mistaken here - that the author either didn't use an LLM or used it for minor style tweaks but ensured that it was making the points they wanted to make.
Read the post more clearly before accusing someone of LLM usage. And even if it is, they are still valid points to be discussed, as opposed to trying to bury it with an LLM accusation.
If that's what happened then it's bad because it leaves people who read the comment confused - hence my questions asking about those.
If the author confirms that those pieces I asked about serve an intentional purpose then I don't care if they used an LLM or not.
My problem isn't with using LLMs to help write comments - there are plenty of reasonable reasons for doing that (like English as a second language). My problem is letting an LLM invent content that doesn't accurately represent the situation or reflect the LLM user's own position.
(The author could also say "I didn't use an LLM", which notably they haven't done elsewhere on this thread yet.)
What's with the "contingent on employment status or ideological alignment" bit about? That's not been mentioned anywhere else so far.
Were those parts (or indeed your entire comment) written with the help of an LLM?