{
  "$type": "site.standard.document",
  "bskyPostRef": {
    "cid": "bafyreia5dji26k7xm37mirl5via4vnwnnm2ujqmcxub4wifhocdb4gxs2e",
    "uri": "at://did:plc:pi6woz4d47bkuws673w2il2r/app.bsky.feed.post/3mlbpkmixe2y2"
  },
  "path": "/t/call-for-proposals-reviewing-testing-and-managing-llm-generated-haskell/14041#post_12",
  "publishedAt": "2026-05-07T16:47:42.000Z",
  "site": "https://discourse.haskell.org",
  "textContent": "michaelpj:\n\n> the event probably selects for people who are more interested in how to apply the tool.\n\nThis highlights my problem with this call for proposals. The _foundation_ (not the “event”) is selecting for a particular audience: people who want to use AI (i.e. people who are pro-AI). If the foundation is not pro-AI then why is it only hosting a pro-AI event and not (also) an event aimed at trying to investigate and reduce the harms of AI? Or just hosting one, more neutral, event?\n\nI also should make it clear that I don’t think the Haskell foundation has some kind of hidden agenda to push AI on the community. Instead, I mainly want to point out tacit, perhaps unintended, implications of this announcement.",
  "title": "Call for proposals: Reviewing, testing, and managing LLM generated Haskell"
}