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Joined 26 days ago
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Cake day: September 18th, 2025

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  • Think of AI as a mirror of you: at best, it can only match your skill level and can’t be smarter or better. If you’re unsure or make mistakes, it will likely repeat them. Like people, it can get stuck on hard problems and without a human to help, it just can’t find a solution. So while it’s useful, don’t fully trust it and always be ready to step in and think for yourself.


  • Yeah, great point! Sticky posts don’t usually get much attention at first, but I’ve found them really useful as go-to references. Kind of like a ‘start here’ guide. If I want to dig into something, like a game, tool, or skill, a good stickied post with links and resources saves me so much time. And it’s still helpful months later. Honestly, more communities could use them!





  • Stick to a small circle of trusted people and websites. Skip mainstream news. Small blogs, niche forums, and tiny YouTube channels are often more honest.

    Avoid Google for discovery. It’s not great anymore. Use DuckDuckGo, Qwant, or Yandex instead. For deeper but less precise results, try Mojeek or Marginalia. Google works okay only if you’re searching within one site, like site:reddit.com.

    Sometimes, searching in other languages helps find hidden gems with less junk. Use a translator if needed.


  • Tools like Turnitin or GPTzero don’t work well enough to trust. The real issue isn’t just detecting AI writing. It’s doing it without falsely accusing students. Even a 0.5% false positive rate is too high when someone’s academic future is on the line. I’m more concerned about wrongly flagging human-written work than missing AI use. These tools can’t explain why they suspect AI. At best, they only catch obvious cases. Ones you’d likely notice yourself anyway.