LLVM implements AI policy requiring human oversight

The open-source project LLVM has introduced a new policy allowing AI-generated code in contributions, provided humans review and understand the submissions. This 'human in the loop' approach ensures accountability while addressing community concerns about transparency. The policy, developed with input from contributors, balances innovation with reliability in software development.

LLVM, a foundational collection of compiler and toolchain components used in projects like Clang, Rust, Swift, and the Linux kernel, has adopted a policy on AI tool use in contributions. Published on January 22, 2026, the guidelines permit developers to employ any AI tools but emphasize full accountability for the submitted work.

Under the policy, contributors must disclose the AI tool used, either in the pull request description, commit message, or authorship details. They are required to review and comprehend their submissions, confidently justifying them during reviews and ensuring they merit a maintainer's attention. The rules clarify that violations will be handled according to existing community processes.

The development process involved extensive community engagement. A LLVM member highlighted discrepancies between the project's AI handling, code of conduct, and actual practices, referencing a notable pull request discussed on Hacker News where AI use was admitted post-submission but not initially disclosed.

LLVM maintainer Reid Kleckner spearheaded the effort. His initial draft, inspired by Fedora's AI policy, proposed restrictions such as limiting newcomers to 150 lines of non-test code. After feedback from community meetings and forums, the final version shifted to more explicit requirements, focusing on review readiness and question-answering ability rather than vague ownership clauses.

The updated AI Tool Use Policy is now available on LLVM's documentation site, including examples of acceptable AI-assisted work and violation guidelines. This move aligns LLVM with other open-source initiatives adapting to AI's growing role in development.

ተያያዥ ጽሁፎች

Tech leaders announcing Linux Foundation's AI-powered cybersecurity initiative for open source software with major partners.
በ AI የተሰራ ምስል

Linux Foundation announces AI security initiative with tech partners

በAI የተዘገበ በ AI የተሰራ ምስል

The Linux Foundation has launched a new initiative using Anthropic's Claude Mythos preview for defensive cybersecurity in open source software. Partners include AWS, Apple, Broadcom, Cisco, CrowdStrike, Google, JPMorgan, Microsoft, NVIDIA, and Palo Alto Networks. The effort aims to secure critical software amid the rise of AI for open source maintainers.

The Linux kernel project has officially documented its policy on AI-assisted code contributions with the release of Linux 7.0. The guidelines require human accountability, disclosure of AI tool use, and a new 'Assisted-by' tag for patches involving AI. Sasha Levin formalized the consensus reached at the 2025 Maintainers Summit.

በAI የተዘገበ

A surge in AI written code submissions is overwhelming volunteers who maintain open source software, leading some to quit the field entirely.

The Linux 7.1 kernel now includes new documentation that defines security bugs more clearly. It also sets guidelines for handling reports generated with artificial intelligence tools.

በAI የተዘገበ

South Africa's Communications Minister Solly Malatsi has withdrawn the draft National Artificial Intelligence Policy following revelations of fictitious sources in its references, likely generated by AI tools. The errors impacted three of the policy's six pillars, leading to internal probes and commitments to accountability. Malatsi described the lapse as a key reason for needing stronger human oversight in AI use.

ይህ ድረ-ገጽ ኩኪዎችን ይጠቀማል

የእኛን ጣቢያ ለማሻሻል ለትንታኔ ኩኪዎችን እንጠቀማለን። የእኛን የሚስጥር ፖሊሲ አንብቡ የሚስጥር ፖሊሲ ለተጨማሪ መረጃ።
ውድቅ አድርግ