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Hi! / Привет! Sorry for yet another such discussion on the WWW! Unfortunately, i am forced to think about it now. I met Flow because decided to look for alternatives to Helix-Editor (Kakoune, Vim, Zed, etc..), whose position is uncertain still. This is partly stupid, and escaping all the llm/ai oppression is unlikely – but this is about the path, not the goal. Maybe this is even a litmus test.. However, there are also less obvious positive consequences: a significant narrowing of the field of choice, paradoxically, is the key to new discoveries! And today i am knocking to a Flow's door... |
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Simply put, our AI policy is that there is no such thing as an AI policy. People can own code (copyright), not AI. Any contribution you make to flow must be owned by you (the contributor) and be contributed under the MIT license that the project uses. If you want to use an LLM to generate code, that is up to you, but your contributions will be evaluated entirely as your own personal work and attributed only to you. Several practical considerations for this (non)policy:
An LLM is the digital equivalent of a chainsaw. If you can create fine art with a chainsaw, good for you! We welcome your contribution. But, if you attempt to swamp us with low quality AI slop that we could've just generated ourselves, you will get the very cold shoulder and we will likely just ignore or insta-close your "contributions". |
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Simply put, our AI policy is that there is no such thing as an AI policy.
People can own code (copyright), not AI. Any contribution you make to flow must be owned by you (the contributor) and be contributed under the MIT license that the project uses. If you want to use an LLM to generate code, that is up to you, but your contributions will be evaluated entirely as your own personal work and attributed only to you.
Several practical considerations for this (non)policy: