On Thu, 16 Apr 2026 at 15:28, Richard Earnshaw (foss) via Gcc
<[email protected]> wrote:
>
> On 14/03/2026 19:02, Jeffrey Law via Gcc wrote:
> >
> >
> > On 3/14/2026 12:59 PM, Jerry D via Gcc wrote:
> >> Some of the various LLM services available appear to be getting very good 
> >> at generating bug fixes. I realize that one must be careful as these tools 
> >> can at times do things that may be superfluous to the actual fix. By 
> >> superfluous I mean lines of code that are not relevant to the lines that 
> >> fix it.
> >>
> >> I saw some discussions of this subject for gcc somewhere and wanted to 
> >> know if we have a specific policy established / documented somewhere 
> >> regarding this.
> > The steering committee is trying to figure out a good policy right now.
> >
> > Jeff
>
> I notice that the Linux kernel recently adopted the following policy:  
> https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/Documentation/process/coding-assistants.rst
>
> Has there been any progress on GCC yet?

Carlos and I prepared a draft policy, but I believe the GCC steering
committee is also looking into it. The FSF are also working on
policies.

Our draft policy takes a similar position to the kernel one: LLMs
cannot do a DCO sign-off as their output is not copyrightable. The
correct trailer to use is Assisted-by and not Co-authored-by. But our
draft policy proposes *not* accepted AI-generated code, only allowing
the use of AI for assistance, idea generation, testing, but not
generating the actual code. That's because the legal status of
AI-generated code is unclear, is not copyrightable, and does not meet
the legal prerequisites for GCC contributions.

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