Guidelines
What to submit
Anything an intellectually curious person interested in AI would find substantive. Original reporting, primary sources, academic papers, court filings, regulatory documents, thoughtful analysis, lab announcements, and serious commentary. If a post is genuinely about AI, it belongs.
What not to submit
- Pure rage bait or partisan flame.
- Self-promotion that isn't substantive (a blog post about a problem you've been thinking about is fine; a pitch for your product or service isn't).
- Low-effort engagement bait — titles like "you won't believe…", or anything written to provoke clicks rather than thought.
- Duplicate posts. If something has been recently submitted, comment on the existing thread instead.
Comments
Be kind. Assume good faith. Disagree with ideas, not people. If a comment doesn't make the conversation better, don't post it. Avoid name-calling, sarcasm at others' expense, and the kind of point-scoring that kills conversation quality.
Voting
Upvote what you find substantive, well-argued, or genuinely interesting — even when you disagree. Don't upvote out of tribal alignment. Voting is permanent, so be deliberate.
Editing and deleting
You can edit your posts and comments within two hours of posting. After that, they lock. You can delete your own content at any time, but deleted comments leave a [deleted] placeholder so threads still make sense.
Account names
Use a stable handle. Don't impersonate others. Don't create alt accounts to manipulate voting or harass other users.