Sequoia has a bug bounty program and nearly all hunters use LLMs. If we were to decide that we would prohibit LLM submissions, we may as well close down the program. When interacting with hunters, I'm experimenting with saying: "Please keep your response to less than 200 words. Do not change the topic. Only consider the reported issue." Initial results are positive. The responses are still from an LLM, but they are shorter and seem more on-topic.
@nwalfield So… you're going to pay out to LLMs instead of supporting actual humans actually putting in the time to learn their craft? That does not sound like a good way to go about things. :F
@phryk I feel like I'm in a bind. I'm against LLMs and don't use them and don't want people who contribute to Sequoia to use them. That said, these hunters with their LLMs are finding issues (albeit most of them are inconsequential). Should I ignore their reports and then not fix the issues? What would you do in my situation?

@nwalfield @phryk

if sequoia has issues that can be found by llms, couldn't you get some free-for-open-source tokens and get the same reports for free?

you'd still have to interact with an llm, but at least you wouldn't have to pay some random person to act as a human-llm-proxy in github issues.

(and then ban 3rd party llm contributions to reduce the workload)

@guenther It's not so easy. I don't want to use LLMs. And not all of the issues are actually found via LLMs, but nearly all of the reporters use LLMs to help them write the reports.

My theory is that most of them don't speak English very well. The people that I interact with are from countries like Algeria and the Philippines where English is not taught as well as it is in places like Europe. Bug bounty programs are attractive to them, because 500 Euro is a lot more than for someone in Europe.

@nwalfield @guenther I can't speak about Algeria, but from an old friend in the Phillippines I know that English is broadly taught and preferred to the point that speaking the native tongue ("mag tagalog") was forbidden on school grounds for a long time.

I absolutely agree that people shouldn't be excluded based on a language barrier, but maybe disallowing LLMs while explicitly stating that translation services are fine may be a middle ground?