Date 2026/01/31
Author Even Rouault (@rouault)
Contact even dot rouault at spatialys dot com
Version N/A
LLM/AI are nowadays a reality, that whether we like it or not, introduces new challenges in our collaborative environment that need to be addressed. This document describes the policy of the QGIS project in that matter.
It is not currently a settled question within the QGIS community whether code created by LLMs is acceptable in the QGIS codebase at all. This QEP is addressed at the interaction aspects of LLM content, and should not be viewed as the project taking a position on whether or not LLM contributions are acceptable.
QGIS's policy is that contributors can use whatever tools they would like to craft their contributions, but there must be a human in the loop. Contributors must read and review all Large Language Model (LLM)-generated code or text before they ask other project members to review it. The contributor is always the author and is fully accountable for their contributions. Contributors should be sufficiently confident that the contribution is high enough quality that asking for a review is a good use of scarce maintainer (called "core contributor" in QGIS parlance) time, and they should be able to answer questions about their work during review.
We expect that new contributors will be less confident in their contributions, and our guidance to them is to start with small contributions that they can fully understand to build confidence. We aspire to be a welcoming community that helps new contributors grow their expertise, but learning involves taking small steps, getting feedback, and iterating. Passing maintainer feedback to an LLM doesn't help anyone grow, and does not sustain our community.
Contributors are expected to be transparent and label contributions that contain substantial amounts of tool-generated content. Our policy on labelling is intended to facilitate reviews, and not to track which parts of QGIS are generated. Contributors should note tool usage in their pull request description, commit message, or wherever authorship is normally indicated for the work. For instance, use a commit message trailer like Assisted-by: . This transparency helps the community develop best practices and understand the role of these new tools.
This policy includes, but is not limited to, the following kinds of contributions:
- Code, usually in the form of a pull request
- QEPs or design proposals
- Issues or security vulnerabilities
- Comments and feedback on pull requests
To ensure sufficient self review and understanding of the work, it is strongly recommended that contributors write PR descriptions themselves (if needed, using tools for translation or copy-editing). The description should explain the motivation, implementation approach, expected impact, and any open questions or uncertainties to the same extent as a contribution made without tool assistance.
An important implication of this policy is that it bans agents that take action
in our digital spaces without human approval, such as the GitHub @claude
agent. Similarly, automated review tools that
publish comments without human review are not allowed. However, an opt-in
review tool that keeps a human in the loop is acceptable under this policy.
As another example, using an LLM to generate documentation, which a contributor
manually reviews for correctness, edits, and then posts as a PR, is an approved
use of tools under this policy.
The reason for our "human-in-the-loop" contribution policy is that processing patches, PRs, QEPs, comments, issues, security alerts to QGIS is not free -- it takes a lot of maintainer time and energy to review those contributions! Sending the unreviewed output of an LLM to open source project maintainers extracts work from them in the form of design and code review, so we call this kind of contribution an "extractive contribution".
Our golden rule is that a contribution should be worth more to the project than the time it takes to review it. These ideas are captured by this quote from the book Working in Public by Nadia Eghbal:
"When attention is being appropriated, producers need to weigh the costs and benefits of the transaction. To assess whether the appropriation of attention is net-positive, it's useful to distinguish between extractive and non-extractive contributions. Extractive contributions are those where the marginal cost of reviewing and merging that contribution is greater than the marginal benefit to the project's producers. In the case of a code contribution, it might be a pull request that's too complex or unwieldy to review, given the potential upside." -- Nadia Eghbal
Prior to the advent of LLMs, open source project maintainers would often review any and all changes sent to the project simply because posting a change for review was a sign of interest from a potential long-term contributor. While new tools enable more development, it shifts effort from the implementor to the reviewer, and our policy exists to ensure that we value and do not squander maintainer time.
If a maintainer judges that a contribution doesn't comply with this policy, they should paste the following response to request changes:
::
This PR doesn't appear to comply with our policy on tool-generated content,
and requires additional justification for why it is valuable enough to the
project for us to review it. Please see our developer policy on
AI-generated contributions:
https://github.com/qgis/QGIS-Enhancement-Proposals/blob/master/qep-408-ai-tool-policy.md
The best ways to make a change less extractive and more valuable are to reduce its size or complexity or to increase its usefulness to the community. These factors are impossible to weigh objectively, and our project policy leaves this determination up to the maintainers of the project, i.e. those who are doing the work of sustaining the project.
If or when it becomes clear that a GitHub issue or PR is off-track and not
moving in the right direction, maintainers should apply the extractive label
to help other reviewers prioritize their review time.
If a contributor fails to make their change meaningfully less extractive, maintainers may lock the conversation and/or close the pull request/issue/QEP. In case of repeated violations of our policy, the QGIS project reserves itself the right to ban temporarily or definitely the infringing person.
Artificial intelligence systems raise many questions around copyright that have yet to be answered. Our policy on AI tools is similar to our copyright policy: Contributors are responsible for ensuring that they have the right to contribute code under the terms of our license, typically meaning that either they, their employer, or their collaborators hold the copyright. Using AI tools to regenerate copyrighted material does not remove the copyright, and contributors are responsible for ensuring that such material does not appear in their contributions. Contributions found to violate this policy will be removed just like any other offending contribution.
This document is a quasi direct adaptation from the LLVM software "AI Tool Use Policy" and due credits go to its original authors: Reid Kleckner, Hubert Tong and "maflcko"