ArXiv will be issuing one-year bans to authors caught submitting AI work.

Journal editors and peer reviewers are being flooded with AI-generated papers that are almost impossible to detect.

Arxiv, the influential preprint server where researchers worldwide publish their work before formal peer review, is tightening its rules on AI-generated content.

The change comes as arXiv and others struggle to manage an influx of AI-generated materials masquerading as rigorous science.

One of the site's moderators described the new policy on social media.

Banned authors won’t be able to submit papers for one year.

ArXiv will be issuing one-year bans to authors caught submitting AI work.

The science platform is tightening its rules again: Anyone who passes off AI garbage as science will be banned – and then scrutinized more closely.

ArXiv is doing more to crack down on the careless use of large language models in scientific papers.

The preprint platform will penalise authors whose papers contain hallucinated references or leftover LLM instructions. A Lancet study found fabricated citations in biomedical…

The arXiv (pronounced "archive") team recently announced a significant update to its official code of conduct. The popular open-access repository of research papers awaiting peer…

AI infractions could result in a year-long ban from the arXiv system, which is an essential communication channel in many fields of research.

A single violation might be enough to result in suspension.

The preprint server is the latest to impose stiff penalties on authors who contribute to AI ‘slop’ — but not everyone is convinced it’s the right approach.

El problema de los artículos con datos ficticios no es nuevo, pero hasta ahora las consecuencias para quienes los publicaban eran difusas

The preprint website arXiv has announced that researchers who have put their names to papers that included errors clearly generated by artificial intelligence (AI) will face a…