Hive's double standard: no to creative AI, yes to AI that makes their work easier
When selective outrage reveals more about the person expressing it than about the technology they condemn.
Hive is a decentralized social network that presents itself as an ethical alternative to corporate platforms. Among its most publicized values is the defense of human creators against the rise of artificial intelligence. Its developers and technical community have been particularly vocal on this front: they create labels, debate governance proposals, and promote policies that penalize AI-generated content. The stance seems noble at first glance. The problem arises when one looks a little more closely at what happens on the other side of the keyboard.
Because those same programmers who denounce the writer who uses ChatGPT for a story, or the illustrator who uses Midjourney for a cover, have no qualms about using Copilot, Cursor, Claude, or any other AI assistant to generate blocks of code, suggest architectures, debug errors, or complete entire functions. The implicit argument—never explicitly stated, because stating it would immediately undermine it—is that human creativity deserves protection, but technical productivity does not.
This is not a philosophical distinction. It is hypocrisy. And of the most revealing kind: the kind that protects one's own territory while colonizing that of others.
"The logic that condemns an AI for writing a poem should, with the same consistency, condemn it for writing a function in Python. If it doesn't, the problem isn't the AI: it's who uses it and for what purpose."
The appeal to "human labor" as a core value crumbles as soon as it is consistently applied. A language model that generates code is doing exactly the same thing as one that generates prose: it processes patterns learned from previous human production and recombines them. The nature of the process is identical. The only real difference is that code benefits the developer and text benefits the writer, the artist, or the content creator.
What this hypocrisy also reveals is a rather disturbing implicit hierarchy of value: technical activity—programming, deploying, building infrastructure—is perceived as superior and deserving of all available technological assistance. Creative activity—writing, illustrating, composing—is perceived as something more fragile and authentic, which should be reserved for pure, unassisted human expression. It's a worldview in which the engineer deserves better tools than the poet.
If the Hive community wants to take its stance against AI seriously, it has two coherent options. The first: extend the ban to all uses of AI, including code, and accept the consequences in terms of development speed and competitiveness. The second: abandon the crusade against AI-generated content and recognize that every person—technical or creative—has the right to decide what tools they use in their work.
What cannot be sustained for long, without losing all credibility, is continuing to use Copilot with one hand while shaking a fist at artists with the other.
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I am not following your logic as per comparing the use of AI for coding being the same as using AI to create blogging content.
A couple of days ago I learned how to use Claude.ai to help me solve a problem. I will be able to boost my productivity and hence earning potential but its not like I will post the code as a blog to get some upvote and be rewarded from the Hive reward pool.
If I use Claude.ai to copy/paste content to Hive that is not using the tool to boost productivity or creativity. It is a cheap way to bleed rewards from the Hive community.
You will need to elaborate some more on your comparative usage of AI before I can understand your logic. Now, if its a personal opinion then say no more.
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I have an idea, but I don't know how to express it in a way that others can understand, so I tell AI to do it. Then I copy and paste its expression. This is penalized as incorrect, and user earnings are removed.
I have an idea to create a computer program that I don't know how to implement, so I tell AI to do it. Then I copy and paste the code to implement it. This is applauded, and I receive funding from the common fund.
In the first example....
AI is presenting content for you to use so you can re-word your own expression and not copy/paste the AI suggestion as your content.
I use Google search all the time to help me better understand things. Once I have a better understanding in my own mind I am able to create content in my own words.
You also said..,
Focus on your understanding and expression of content you want to share and not trying to do something totally out of your control. AI doesn't know your audience ability to understand anymore than you do.
In the second example...
I'm guessing your not a coder. I don't see myself as a coder but I have a good understanding of the benefit of using code to boost my own productivity.
Do you have a link to content where a coder used copy/paste code into a blog and earned from the AI effort and not so much from their re-work of the AI code?
Its possible that a coder took the easy path to earn a little Hive but I don't follow the scenario you suggest. I would like to see an example of what you suggest.
I mentioned how I used AI code in the following blog.
https://peakd.com/hive-102963/@fjworld/fjworld-update-the-ides-of-march-2026
I didn't copy/paste code as content. I shared the result of me using an AI tool. Doesn't mean that my content was generated using AI.
Keep in mind that every time you share content on Hive it allows readers to better understand the style and character of a Hive account. This is very valuable to those who are most aware. Account activities can be very predictable and telling of the person behind the account.
I do appreciate your response in elaborating on your prose versus coding comparison.
Wishing you all the best.
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