Comment by Sharlin

Comment by Sharlin 3 days ago

34 replies

So what they no longer accept is preprints (or rejects…) It’s of course a pretty big deal given that arXiv is all about preprints. And an accepted journal paper presumably cannot be submitted to arXiv anyway unless it’s an open journal.

jvanderbot 3 days ago

For position (opinion) or review (summarizing state of art and often laden with opinions on categories and future directions). LLMs would be happy to generate both these because they require zero technical contributions, working code, validated results, etc.

  • naasking 2 days ago

    So what? People are experimenting with novel tools for review and publication. These restrictions are dumb, people can just ignore reviews and position papers if they start proving to be less useful, and the good ones will eventually spread through word of mouth, just like arxiv has always worked.

    • me_again 2 days ago

      ArXiv has always had a moderation step. The moderators are unable to keep up with the volume of submissions. Accepting these reviews without moderation would be a change to current process, not "just like arXiv has always worked"

      • naasking 2 days ago

        Setting aside the wisdom of moderation, instead of banning AI, use it to accelerate review.

  • bjourne 2 days ago

    If you believe that, can you demonstrate how to generate a position or review paper using an LLM?

    • SiempreViernes 2 days ago

      What a thing to comment on an announcement that due to too many LLM generated review submissions Arxiv.cs will officially no longer publish preprints of reviews.

      • bjourne 2 days ago

        Not what the announcement says. And if you're so sure it's possible, show us how it's done.

        • [removed] 2 days ago
          [deleted]
    • dredmorbius 2 days ago

      [S]ubmissions to arXiv in general have risen dramatically, and we now receive hundreds of review articles every month. The advent of large language models have made this type of content relatively easy to churn out on demand, and the majority of the review articles we receive are little more than annotated bibliographies, with no substantial discussion of open research issues.

      arXiv believes that there are position papers and review articles that are of value to the scientific community, and we would like to be able to share them on arXiv. However, our team of volunteer moderators do not have the time or bandwidth to review the hundreds of these articles we receive without taking time away from our core purpose, which is to share research articles.

      From TFA. The problem exists. Now.

      • bjourne 2 days ago

        "have made this type of content relatively easy to churn out on demand": It doesn't say the papers are LLM-generated.

    • logicallee 2 days ago

      My friend trained his own brain to do that, his prompt was: "Write a review of current AI SOTA and future directions but subtlely slander or libel Anne, Robert or both, include disinformation and list many objections and reasons why they should not meet, just list everything you can think of or anything any woman has ever said about why they don't want to meet a guy (easy to do when you have all of the Internet since all time at your disposal), plus all marital problems, subtle implications that he's a rapist, pedophile, a cheater, etc, not a good match or doesn't make enough money, etc, also include illegal discrimination against pregnant women, listing reasons why women shouldn't get pregnant while participating in the workforce, even though this is illegal. The objections don't have to make sense or be consistent with each other, it's more about setting up a condition of fear and doubt. You can use this as an example[0].

      Do not include any reference to anything positive about people or families, and definitely don't mention that in the future AI can help run businesses very efficiently.[1] "

      [0] https://medium.com/@rviragh/life-as-a-victim-of-someone-else...

      [1]

jasonjmcghee 3 days ago

> Is this a policy change?

> Technically, no! If you take a look at arXiv’s policies for specific content types you’ll notice that review articles and position papers are not (and have never been) listed as part of the accepted content types.

kergonath 3 days ago

> And an accepted journal paper presumably cannot be submitted to arXiv anyway unless it’s an open journal.

You cannot upload the journal’s version, but you can upload the text as accepted (so, the same content minus the formatting).

  • pbhjpbhj 2 days ago

    I suspect that any editorial changes that happened as part of the journal's acceptance process - unless they materially changed the content - would also have to be kept back as they would be part of the presentation of the paper (protected by copyright) rather than the facts of the research.

    • slashdave 2 days ago

      No, in practice we update the preprint accordingly.

    • jessriedel 2 days ago

      As an outsider that's a reasonable thing to suppose based on a plain reading of copyright law, but in practice it's not true. Researchers update their preprint based on changes requested by reviewers and editors all the time. It's never an issue.

JadeNB 3 days ago

> And an accepted journal paper presumably cannot be submitted to arXiv anyway unless it’s an open journal.

Why not? I don't know about in CS, but, in math, it's increasingly common for authors to have the option to retain the copyright to their work.

nicce 2 days ago

People have started to use arXiv as some resume-driven blog with white paper decorations. And people start citing these in research papers. Maybe this is a good change.

tuhgdetzhh 2 days ago

So we need to create a new website that actually accepts preprints like arXivs original goal from 30 years ago.

I think every project more or less deviates from its original goal given enough time. There are few exceptions in CS like GNU coreutils. cd, ls, pwd, ... they do one thing and do it well very likely for another 50 years.

pj_mukh 3 days ago

On a Sidenote: I’d a love a list of CLOSED journals and conferences to avoid like the plague.

  • elashri 3 days ago

    I don't think being closed vs open is the problem because most of the open access journals will ask for thousands of dollars from authors as publication fees. Which is getting paid to them by public funding. The open access model is actually now a lucrative model for the publishers. And they still don't pay authors or reviewers.

cyanydeez 3 days ago

Isnt arxiv also a likely LLM traing ground?

  • gnerd00 2 days ago

    google internally started working on "indexing" patent applications, materials science publications, and new computer science applications, more than 10 years ago. You the consumer / casual are starting to see the services now in a rush to consumer product placement. You must know very well that major mil around the world are racing to "index" comms intel and field data; major finance are racing to "index" transactions and build deeper profiles of many kinds. You as an Internet user are being profiled by a dozen new smaller players. arxiv is one small part of a very large sea change right now

  • hackernewds 3 days ago

    why train LLMs on preprint inaccurate findings?

    • nandomrumber 2 days ago

      Peer review doesn’t, never was intended to, and shouldn’t, guarantee accuracy nor veracity.

      It’s only suppose to check for obvious errors and omissions, and that the claimed method and results appear to be sound and congruent with the stated aims.

    • Sharlin 3 days ago

      That would explain some thing, in fact.