That sounds like another spin of the white paper best practice bros we've always had. Or "the consultants said" appeals to outside authority. Nothing new there.
Like never mind reality or learned experience, or the particulars of our environment. I found this white paper that says do X, let's shoehorn everything into this one size fits all approach that is terrible, rather than using it as a reference and engineering our own approach... like where do they think baby white papers even come from? Try arguing with them and it's *points to white paper link*
Or they asked the outside consultants if we should do X and they said yes, now it's "the consultant says". MFer... I've been on the other side of the table, you could ask them anything, there's a hundred ways to solve a problem, and they'll affirm any of them if they don't totally suck. I love joining the next meeting early and getting the consultants all buttered up to my approach without explaining the disagreement on our side, then act like ... they said ... when my disagreeing coworker shows up. It's like two kids trying to trick their parents into taking a side without them knowing there were sides. I'll implement my solution anyway when that coworker is on vacation, and anyone deserves that response if they can't explain their position without leaning on some higher authority bs, myself included. Just don't do it, internalize outside advice and own it, with understanding.
I can see how AI might be used for that affirmation seeking appeal to authority bullshit because it pushes the same buttons, but I haven't seen it myself yet. Someday I'm going to give someone the look, the why did you do that look, and they're going to say "the AI said", and whoooo boy are they going to get some clever "the AI said" right back. It's the only way people learn.