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CIRCLE WITH A DOT

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  3. A review of the proceedings from four major computer-science conferences showed that none from 2021, and all from 2025, had fake citations.

A review of the proceedings from four major computer-science conferences showed that none from 2021, and all from 2025, had fake citations.

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misconductscholcommllmshallucinations
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  • petersuber@fediscience.orgP This user is from outside of this forum
    petersuber@fediscience.orgP This user is from outside of this forum
    petersuber@fediscience.org
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    A review of the proceedings from four major computer-science conferences showed that none from 2021, and all from 2025, had fake citations.
    https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.05867v1

    The authors prefer the term "mysterious citations" which they define this way: "No paper [with] a similar enough title exists. The cited location either does not exist or holds an unrelated paper with different authors."

    #AI #LLMs #Hallucinations #Misconduct #ScholComm

    emmatonkin@mstdn.socialE 1 Reply Last reply
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    • petersuber@fediscience.orgP petersuber@fediscience.org

      A review of the proceedings from four major computer-science conferences showed that none from 2021, and all from 2025, had fake citations.
      https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.05867v1

      The authors prefer the term "mysterious citations" which they define this way: "No paper [with] a similar enough title exists. The cited location either does not exist or holds an unrelated paper with different authors."

      #AI #LLMs #Hallucinations #Misconduct #ScholComm

      emmatonkin@mstdn.socialE This user is from outside of this forum
      emmatonkin@mstdn.socialE This user is from outside of this forum
      emmatonkin@mstdn.social
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      @petersuber "No author within our dataset acknowledged using AI to generate citations even though all four conference policies required it, indicating current policies are insufficient. "

      A very strange mystery indeed. Perhaps we should call Poirot in so he can point out the obvious answers on page 1, knock off work early and spend the rest of the book wandering around delicatessens tasting brands of hot chocolate, or something.

      emmatonkin@mstdn.socialE 1 Reply Last reply
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      • emmatonkin@mstdn.socialE emmatonkin@mstdn.social

        @petersuber "No author within our dataset acknowledged using AI to generate citations even though all four conference policies required it, indicating current policies are insufficient. "

        A very strange mystery indeed. Perhaps we should call Poirot in so he can point out the obvious answers on page 1, knock off work early and spend the rest of the book wandering around delicatessens tasting brands of hot chocolate, or something.

        emmatonkin@mstdn.socialE This user is from outside of this forum
        emmatonkin@mstdn.socialE This user is from outside of this forum
        emmatonkin@mstdn.social
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        @petersuber
        This whole thing reminds me very much of RFC 3514.

        Well over two decades after the Evil Bit was first proposed (a one-bit security flag in IP v4 to indicate that a packet is sent with evil intent), we still see apparently malicious packets arriving at firewalls, yet these do *not* have the Evil Bit set. However, as the Evil Bit is not set, we cannot say with certainty whether these apparently malicious packets are, in fact, evil.

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