
The Fedora Project is one of the cornerstones of the Linux ecosystem. It provides a cutting-edge, community-driven distribution that serves as the upstream for Red Hat Enterprise Linux and many other distributions.
Now, the project is tackling one of the most pressing questions in modern software development: How can AI tools be responsibly integrated into open source contribution workflows?
The Fedora Council has unveiled a comprehensive draft policy on AI-assisted contributions. This marks the culmination of a year-long community consultation process that began with a survey in summer 2024.
Fedora Looks for Feedback on AI
The draft policy covers four main areas of AI use in the project. For contributors using AI tools, the rules are straightforward. You're responsible for everything you submit. AI output is treated as a suggestion, not final code. You need to review, test, and understand what you're contributing.
The policy also calls out "AI slop" for unverified, low-quality machine-generated content. If AI significantly helped with a contribution, the policy encourages noting it in commit messages.
Reviewers can use AI tools too, but they can't automate the entire review process. The final call on accepting contributions has to come from humans.
For project management, AI tools can't be used to evaluate code of conduct matters, funding requests, conference talk submissions, or leadership positions, and user-facing AI features have to be opt-in, especially if they send data to external services.
On the other hand, the policy encourages packaging AI tools and frameworks for Fedora, as long as they follow existing packaging and licensing guidelines. For data usage, aggressive scraping that puts a heavy load on Fedora infrastructure isn't acceptable.
The draft is now in a formal two-week community review period, as per Fedora's Policy Change policy. The discussion has been going strong, with community members sharing their perspectives on the proposed guidelines.
Once the feedback period wraps up, the Fedora Council will hold a formal vote via ticket voting to decide whether to implement the policy.
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