Open timwalsh300 opened 6 days ago
Hi, Tim
Thanks for informing me. Feel free to use any code in the repo!
Could you kindly provide the link to the issue in your repo? I want to understand more context about the situation. Just curious.
Tim Walsh @.***>於 2024年10月27日 週日,上午6:31寫道:
I'm working on an academic research project, and someone filed an issue on my repository pointing out that some code (an early stopping implementation) appears to have been cloned from this repository. Furthermore, they pointed out that your repository has no license, so (I think) your code isn't supposed to be re-used, despite being public, according to GitHub's open source guide. The code entered my project when I asked ChatGPT to put together some boilerplate PyTorch for me including an early stopping function; it does appear that ChatGPT learned from your code.
Essentially, my question is: May I please continue to use your early stopping implementation for purely academic and non-commercial purposes? It has worked well for me, and I'm happy to credit you for it.
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Thank you very much!
Yes, here's the link to the issue. I thought it was a bit strange, out-of-the-blue, but the person who opened the issue is not wrong... https://github.com/timwalsh300/open-world-vf/issues/1
I suspect that they might be doing their own research project, scanning GitHub for ChatGPT generated code and other repositories that match it.
I'm working on an academic research project, and someone filed an issue on my repository pointing out that some code (an early stopping implementation) appears to have been cloned from this repository. Furthermore, they pointed out that your repository has no license, so (I think) your code isn't supposed to be re-used, despite being public, according to GitHub's open source guide. The code entered my project when I asked ChatGPT to put together some boilerplate PyTorch for me including an early stopping function; it does appear that ChatGPT learned from your code.
Essentially, my question is: May I please continue to use your early stopping implementation for purely academic and non-commercial purposes? It has worked well for me, and I'm happy to credit you for it.