I wish I could recommend this piece more, because it makes a bunch of great points, but the "normal technology" case feels misleading to me.
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RE: https://mamot.fr/@pluralistic/116219642373307943
I wish I could recommend this piece more, because it makes a bunch of great points, but the "normal technology" case feels misleading to me. It's not _wrong_, exactly, but radium paint was also a "normal technology" according to this rubric, and I still very much don't want to get any on me and especially not in my mouth
@glyph it's difficult to understand why anyone with Cory's reputation would decide to die on such ridiculous hill
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@nils_berger have you got a link for that report?
@glyph @nils_berger
i think most people are just referring to these blog posts:
DORA | Balancing AI tensions: Moving from AI adoption to effective SDLC use
DORA is a long running research program that seeks to understand the capabilities that drive software delivery and operations performance. DORA helps teams apply those capabilities, leading to better organizational performance.
(dora.dev)
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@crazyjaneway @glyph We had a client use it to give them permission to spam out their new thing, after we'd explained (and their local IT guy also explained) that if they did that on our servers we'd lock their account.
Which we then did. The client said, "ChatGPT said I could do it". The sycophancy combined with overconfidence is utterly frightening.
I don't particularly like it when my friends use it in their communication with me either.
AI and that Guy at the bar
In tech we've always had evangelists, weither it's for FOSS, or Blockchain or now AI. It's a natural thing to do. You have a tech you'r...
cobbles (dotart.blog)
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@nils_berger have you got a link for that report?
This is the link to download it:
DORA | State of AI-assisted Software Development 2025
DORA is a long running research program that seeks to understand the capabilities that drive software delivery and operations performance. DORA helps teams apply those capabilities, leading to better organizational performance.
(dora.dev)
Not sure if there's a mirror
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For me, this is the body horror money quote from that Scientific American article:
"participants who saw the AI autocomplete prompts reported attitudes that were more in line with the AI’s position—including people who didn’t use the AI’s suggested text at all"
So maybe you can't use it "responsibly", or "safely". You can't even ignore it and choose not to use it once you've seen it.
If you can see it, the basilisk has already won.
@glyph don't look at it!
Or even better, the Doctor Who version:
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RE: https://mamot.fr/@pluralistic/116219642373307943
I wish I could recommend this piece more, because it makes a bunch of great points, but the "normal technology" case feels misleading to me. It's not _wrong_, exactly, but radium paint was also a "normal technology" according to this rubric, and I still very much don't want to get any on me and especially not in my mouth
@glyph Why doesn’t he just use the word Luddite? Maybe because the Luddites were right and that would undermine his argument?
Phie Lux (@sabrina@fedi01.unicornsparkle.club)
Imagine if, at the start of the Industrial Revolution, we as a species had paused and asked ourselves what the ethical implications are and what the possible and present harms could be. Maybe we could have avoided the worst excesses of modern society like pollution, increasing inequality, overconsumption, climate change, fascism, and social atomization. If we are truly at the start of another such technological revolution, maybe we should learn from history and not dive head first into it. Especially when we know a lot of the ethical issues and real harms already. It seems plainly foolish to look at the harm we’ve done to ourselves with the last technological revolution and decide to just double down on it.
fedi01.unicornsparkle.club (fedi01.unicornsparkle.club)
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The very fact that things like OpenClaw and Moltbook even *exist* is an indication, to me, that people are *not* making sober, considered judgements about how and where to use LLMs. The fact that they are popular at *all*, let alone popular enough to be featured in mainstream media shows that whatever this cognitive distortion is, it's widespread.
@glyph The "distortion" is from CoVID: https://www.panaccindex.info/p/answered-does-covid-19-harm-the-brain
A facsimile/helper for _thinking_ seems pretty interesting if one suffers from brain fog, cognitive decline, neuro-nnflamation, etc.
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R relay@relay.mycrowd.ca shared this topic
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Two statements I believe are consistently correct:
(1) Generative “AI” produces code significantly faster than humans do only when nobody takes sufficient time to understand it (not just in a narrow syntactic sense; also in the context of organizational needs, longer-term plans, interaction with other applications, etc.)
(2) Code nobody understands well is “technical debt” *by definition*, because it takes a disproportionate amount of time and brain power to change or improve.
Conclusion: unless software developers are incredibly disciplined, and have a level of time and autonomy they generally do not have in a major tech company, generative “AI” usage will *consistently* create large amounts of “tech debt”.
@dpnash @glyph
> “AI” usage will *consistently* create large amounts of “tech debt”Um, no. There will be no technical debt in such products. Maintenance is too costly and the shop owners would be tied to some protein techie. They will soon pivot to #disposable #software
If some user fills a bug, the whole thing will be generated anew with its prompt amended like "; make bug-description disappear". Possibly with new UI/UX. For the better, because users will be trained to not report bugs but make workarounds, as bug report might make protein serfs to endure UX change...
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Furthermore, it is not "nuts" to dismiss the experience of an LLM user. In fact, you must dismiss all experiences of LLM users, even if the LLM user is yourself. Fly by instruments because the cognitive fog is too think for your eyes to see.
Because the interesting, novel thing about LLMs, the thing that makes them dangerous and interesting, is that they are, by design, epistemic disruptors.
They can produce symboloids more rapidly than any thinking mind. Repetition influences cognition.
@glyph it is nuts to dismiss the experience of a paint huffer
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2. If it is "nuts" to dismiss this experience, then it would be "nuts" to dismiss mine: I have seen many, many high profile people in tech, who I have respect for, take *absolutely unhinged* risks with LLM technology that they have never, in decades-long careers, taken with any other tool or technology. It reads like a kind of cognitive decline. It's scary. And many of these people are *leaders* who use their influence to steamroll objections to these tools because they're "obviously" so good
many high profile people in tech, who I have respect for, take absolutely unhinged risks with LLM technology that they have never, in decades-long careers, taken with any other tool or technology
Maybe they should have.
I also hate the LLM force-feeding, but even before they surged the state of computing was becoming a smoldering wreck. Maybe those "leaders" just had bad judgment all along? IIRC most of them were either rubber-stamping or looking away from the IoT dumpster fire and organizing their curricula around the idea the users can't handle URLs responsibly.
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@glyph Something that has gotten under my skin for the past year or so is seeing code changes like: large refactors, porting a legacy tool to rust, even minor bugfixes - things that would be a struggle to push through the inertia of code review - get fast tracked when "the AI did it." Like the exact PRs I've written and tried to advocate before and eventually gave up on. The changes and their risks are the same, I can only conclude that the bar is lower for accepting "AI" contributions.
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What I've observed very recently is that even intelligent people, experienced developers - who know perfectly well that LLMs are just generators of text from statistical models of what someone is likely to write - will still pull up AI written search results and proceed on the automatic assumption that whatever they say is correct.
That is not a general observation. That was this morning, with some senior programmers trying to solve a problem that's prolonging a code freeze.
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I don't want to be a catastrophist but every day I am politely asking "this seems like it might be incredibly toxic brain poison. I don't think I want to use something that could be a brain poison. could you show me some data that indicates it's safe?" And this request is ignored. No study has come out showing it *IS* a brain poison, but there are definitely a few that show it might be, and nothing in the way of a *successful* safety test.
@glyph you know what that reminds me of?
Bloodletting and handwashing
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@glyph i've used the term "neural asbestos" before and it feels a lot like that may be the type of thing we're dealing with
And yet Doctorow thinks LLMs are great for him to use for copyediting. Maybe find a less hypocritical person to quote. All Gen AI horrifies me, I visualize environmental destruction with every "prompt."
@kirakira @glyph
https://floss.social/@sstendahl/116220713455956161 -
@glyph you know what that reminds me of?
Bloodletting and handwashing
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@glyph Similarly, “hallucination” and “delusion” are pre-poisoned for use in this scope
I have on occasion made use of “phantasmagoria” around parts of this dynamic, especially for stuff like the droll “omg the AI is learning to lie to us, we’re cooked!” type bullshit posts, but that’s still not expansive enough to include the various other mental affectations
we need other perorations, and better perseverations alongside
@froztbyte @glyph maybe “AI mediated cognitive change”, subtypes “AI mediated cognitive enhancement”, “AI mediated cognitive decline”, and “AI mediated cognitive distortion”?
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@glyph This basilisk thing (great imagery) is very true in translation. Once you've seen the MT suggestion, with its wonky syntax and not quite right tone, it's very hard to dismiss it. The cognitive load is consequently enormous
@janeishly @glyph it is also very present in art: e.g. once you've seen a partial draft for something (generated), your idea is no longer yours - you're primed by a foreign version of your creation.
like watching a movie before reading the book it was based on.
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For me, this is the body horror money quote from that Scientific American article:
"participants who saw the AI autocomplete prompts reported attitudes that were more in line with the AI’s position—including people who didn’t use the AI’s suggested text at all"
So maybe you can't use it "responsibly", or "safely". You can't even ignore it and choose not to use it once you've seen it.
If you can see it, the basilisk has already won.
@glyph i like to let them sort it out - ask the same question to like 3 models, sort of crude arbitrage

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1. YES THEY ARE.
They are vibe-coding mission-critical AWS modules. They are generating tech debt at scale. They don't THINK that that's what they're doing. Do you think most programmers conceive of their daily (non-LLM) activities as "putting in lots of bugs"? No, that is never what we say we're doing. Yet, we turn around, and there all the bugs are.
With LLMs, we can look at the mission-critical AWS modules and ask after the fact, were they vibe-coded? AWS says yes https://arstechnica.com/civis/threads/after-outages-amazon-to-make-senior-engineers-sign-off-on-ai-assisted-changes.1511983/
@glyph While this is purely anecdotal, it's darkly comical that just yesterday, at work, a "chief architect" explained and described their claude code setup as ... "giving a monkey a machine gun" ... with no irony or shame.
His point was very clearly that he wasn't sure he could trust his setup, but it was still certainly worth it for the perceived gains.
While I've not made many arguments pro/against LLM usage in general (based on how useful they are or aren't), this admission seemed really odd to me.
We're being asked to implement these tools in our workflows, but we're not given guidance on how to do so safely.
And I'm not against experimentation and learning new things--but I think that has its place within a certain context.
You want to give a monkey a machine gun? Well, find someplace safe to do so, and hope nobody gets hurt... but, like, why should I do the same thing?