This is an essay. It contains the advice or opinions of one or more Wikipedia contributors. This page is not an encyclopedia article, nor is it one of Wikipedia's policies or guidelines, as it has not been thoroughly vetted by the community. Some essays represent widespread norms; others only represent minority viewpoints. |
This page in a nutshell: Avoid using large language models (LLMs) to write original content or generate references. LLMs can be used for certain tasks (like copyediting, summarization, and paraphrasing) if the editor has substantial prior experience in the intended task and rigorously scrutinizes the results before publishing them. |
“ | Large language models have limited reliability, limited understanding, limited range, and hence need human supervision. | ” |
— Michael Osborne, Professor of Machine Learning, University of Oxford[1] |
While large language models (colloquially termed "AI chatbots" in some contexts) can be very useful, machine-generated text (much like human-generated text) can contain errors or flaws, or be outright useless.
Specifically, asking an LLM to "write a Wikipedia article" can sometimes cause the output to be outright fabrication, complete with fictitious references. It may be biased, may libel living people, or may violate copyrights. Thus, all text generated by LLMs should be verified by editors before use in articles.
Editors who are not fully aware of these risks and not able to overcome the limitations of these tools, should not edit with their assistance. LLMs should not be used for tasks with which the editor does not have substantial familiarity. Their outputs should be rigorously scrutinized for compliance with all applicable policies. In any case, editors should avoid publishing content on Wikipedia obtained by asking LLMs to write original content. Even if such content has been heavily edited, alternatives that do not use machine-generated content are preferable. As with all edits, an editor is fully responsible for their LLM-assisted edits.
Wikipedia is not a testing ground. Using LLMs to write one's talk page comments or edit summaries, in a non-transparent way, is strongly discouraged. LLMs used to generate or modify text should be mentioned in the edit summary, even if their terms of service do not require it.