07:17
<Rob Palmer>
I'm preparing the full announcement of the November Tokyo meeting, but in case folk haven't seen it publicly: - TPAC is Mon-Fri 10-14 Nov in Kobe - JSConf.jp is Sunday 16 Nov in Tokyo - TG5 is Monday 17 Nov in Tokyo - TC39 is Tues-Thurs 18-20 Nov in Tokyo
07:18
<Rob Palmer>
This contiguity is no accident.
09:17
<Michael Ficarra>
From the ACM policy on authorship: https://www.acm.org/publications/policies/new-acm-policy-on-authorship > Generative AI tools and technologies, such as ChatGPT, may not be listed as authors of an ACM published Work. The use of generative AI tools and technologies to create content is permitted but must be fully disclosed in the Work. For example, the authors could include the following statement in the Acknowledgements section of the Work: ChatGPT was utilized to generate sections of this Work, including text, tables, graphs, code, data, citations, etc. If you are uncertain ­about the need to disclose the use of a particular tool, err on the side of caution, and include a disclosure in the acknowledgements section of the Work. > > Basic word processing systems that recommend and insert replacement text, perform spelling or grammar checks and corrections, or systems that do language translations are to be considered exceptions to this disclosure requirement and are generally permitted and need not be disclosed in the Work. As the line between Generative AI tools and basic word processing systems like MS-Word or Grammarly becomes blurred, this Policy will be updated.
09:19
<Michael Ficarra>
this sounds like a fine policy for us
14:18
<Aki>
I'll look into this further, but I'm reasonably certain we're beholden to ISO's ruling in this case, which is a prohibition on content generated from LLMs
14:50
<saminahusain>
I will look deeper into this item.
20:32
<Rob Palmer>
Given our spec travels through Ecma and ISO, the easiest default is to inherit the constraints of both. So clarity from you, Samina & Aki, is appreciated.