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  3. I saw a wild take where someone said distributions are fascist for using systemd because systemd now uses Claude for code review.

I saw a wild take where someone said distributions are fascist for using systemd because systemd now uses Claude for code review.

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  • ariadne@social.treehouse.systemsA ariadne@social.treehouse.systems

    I saw a wild take where someone said distributions are fascist for using systemd because systemd now uses Claude for code review.

    okay. fine, I guess.

    but if we are rejecting dependencies that use AI tooling, where do we go?

    seriously. where do we go?

    if the Linux kernel is using AI tools for codegen, then where do we go?

    FreeBSD? I would put money on it that they use AI tools.

    OpenBSD? NetBSD? HURD?

    do we hard fork every dependency that is now tainted? do we even have the resources to do it?

    FreeBSD and Illumos are the only ones reasonably close in the tech tree and I suspect both use AI tools too, as their development, like Linux, is driven by capital.

    teftuft@leporid.netT This user is from outside of this forum
    teftuft@leporid.netT This user is from outside of this forum
    teftuft@leporid.net
    wrote last edited by
    #67

    @ariadne yeah, its looks like more and more code it going to be tainted or produced by LLMs in some way. It seems unavoidable, so I guess we need more ergonomic tools for safely running untrusted code to protect as much as is possible from its flaws. But, I think even before there were LLMs this was the case. I haven't audited all of the code my computer runs and some is very flawed I'm sure.

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    • ariadne@social.treehouse.systemsA ariadne@social.treehouse.systems

      @thesamesam @bluca @lanodan i guess to me, it feels unnatural and jarring to argue with a chatbot in a code review.

      but that is far less harmful than dealing with changesets where the author does not even fucking know what he is submitting and cannot defend his work.

      *that* is true misery as a maintainer.

      aronowski@furry.engineerA This user is from outside of this forum
      aronowski@furry.engineerA This user is from outside of this forum
      aronowski@furry.engineer
      wrote last edited by
      #68

      @ariadne @thesamesam @bluca @lanodan The end-user should always be responsible for what they deliver, no matter the tools. Then any excuses like "AI wrote it" would not have any rights to defend the user.

      ariadne@social.treehouse.systemsA 1 Reply Last reply
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      • ariadne@social.treehouse.systemsA ariadne@social.treehouse.systems

        I saw a wild take where someone said distributions are fascist for using systemd because systemd now uses Claude for code review.

        okay. fine, I guess.

        but if we are rejecting dependencies that use AI tooling, where do we go?

        seriously. where do we go?

        if the Linux kernel is using AI tools for codegen, then where do we go?

        FreeBSD? I would put money on it that they use AI tools.

        OpenBSD? NetBSD? HURD?

        do we hard fork every dependency that is now tainted? do we even have the resources to do it?

        FreeBSD and Illumos are the only ones reasonably close in the tech tree and I suspect both use AI tools too, as their development, like Linux, is driven by capital.

        distractions@mastodon.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
        distractions@mastodon.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
        distractions@mastodon.social
        wrote last edited by
        #69

        @ariadne well, as a developer who has been writing linux kernel code since back in about 2001 or so (actually I think it was something alsa/bluetooth related so probably user space at that point, but … I remember digging deep) - I don’t think it’s feasible to continue OSS without making use of gen AI in development.

        Its like saying we can’t use C, everything has to be ASM.

        That doesn’t mean developers don’t need to read or understand the code anymore before committing. But a hard ban? Idk.

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        • aronowski@furry.engineerA aronowski@furry.engineer

          @ariadne @thesamesam @bluca @lanodan The end-user should always be responsible for what they deliver, no matter the tools. Then any excuses like "AI wrote it" would not have any rights to defend the user.

          ariadne@social.treehouse.systemsA This user is from outside of this forum
          ariadne@social.treehouse.systemsA This user is from outside of this forum
          ariadne@social.treehouse.systems
          wrote last edited by
          #70

          @aronowski @thesamesam @bluca @lanodan yes, that is basically the pkgconf contribution policy in a nutshell.

          we have taken some steps to tell agentic tools to fuck off though, because i do not want to deal with it

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          • omnirabbit@social.treehouse.systemsO omnirabbit@social.treehouse.systems

            @ariadne it's protestantism but swapping the god from the ethereal one to "reason". if you are bad you are tainted permanently and must stone; if they stopped using AI tools it would also not be enough because they are "tainted".

            this pattern repeats over and over from people who unlearned one piece but didn't deprogram the religious dogmatic patterns, and you end up here.

            is Linux foundation funding the destruction of jobs, removing human contributions, destroying the world with debt, any of that? of course not! but it's still dogma.

            I don't have a good answer to this, just to remind people what the actual goals and actions of orgs are and hope they listen.

            matt@toot.cafeM This user is from outside of this forum
            matt@toot.cafeM This user is from outside of this forum
            matt@toot.cafe
            wrote last edited by
            #71

            @omnirabbit @ariadne I'm not sure. Cory Doctorow had a well-known post a month or so ago where he described a hard anti-LLM stance as "purity culture", and that produced a significant backlash, with people saying that the moral issue in this case was clear enough to justify complete abstinence. But I guess that doesn't necessarily extend to considering non-abstaining dependencies as tainted.

            matt@toot.cafeM 1 Reply Last reply
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            • matt@toot.cafeM matt@toot.cafe

              @omnirabbit @ariadne I'm not sure. Cory Doctorow had a well-known post a month or so ago where he described a hard anti-LLM stance as "purity culture", and that produced a significant backlash, with people saying that the moral issue in this case was clear enough to justify complete abstinence. But I guess that doesn't necessarily extend to considering non-abstaining dependencies as tainted.

              matt@toot.cafeM This user is from outside of this forum
              matt@toot.cafeM This user is from outside of this forum
              matt@toot.cafe
              wrote last edited by
              #72

              @omnirabbit @ariadne Your argument resonates with me, because I grew up immersed in evangelicalism, so I realize that I still need to deprogram the broader religious dogmatic patterns. But then you have people, especialy here on fedi, who are absolutely certain that using LLMs is bad and that the analogy to religious purity is wrong.

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              • dysfun@social.treehouse.systemsD This user is from outside of this forum
                dysfun@social.treehouse.systemsD This user is from outside of this forum
                dysfun@social.treehouse.systems
                wrote last edited by
                #73

                @ariadne @distractions i feel like the decades we've managed already are worth something.

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                • ariadne@social.treehouse.systemsA ariadne@social.treehouse.systems

                  I saw a wild take where someone said distributions are fascist for using systemd because systemd now uses Claude for code review.

                  okay. fine, I guess.

                  but if we are rejecting dependencies that use AI tooling, where do we go?

                  seriously. where do we go?

                  if the Linux kernel is using AI tools for codegen, then where do we go?

                  FreeBSD? I would put money on it that they use AI tools.

                  OpenBSD? NetBSD? HURD?

                  do we hard fork every dependency that is now tainted? do we even have the resources to do it?

                  FreeBSD and Illumos are the only ones reasonably close in the tech tree and I suspect both use AI tools too, as their development, like Linux, is driven by capital.

                  kirakira@furry.engineerK This user is from outside of this forum
                  kirakira@furry.engineerK This user is from outside of this forum
                  kirakira@furry.engineer
                  wrote last edited by
                  #74

                  @ariadne i do wonder what a path away from this (that isn't "everyone agrees that doing that is bad") looks like

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                  • lproven@social.vivaldi.netL lproven@social.vivaldi.net

                    @ariadne

                    > FreeBSD? I would put money on it that they use AI tools.

                    As of September they were working on a policy -- to ban it.

                    Link Preview Image
                    FreeBSD Project isn't ready to let AI commit code just yet

                    : But it's OK to use it for docs and translations

                    favicon

                    (www.theregister.com)

                    ariadne@social.treehouse.systemsA This user is from outside of this forum
                    ariadne@social.treehouse.systemsA This user is from outside of this forum
                    ariadne@social.treehouse.systems
                    wrote last edited by
                    #75

                    @lproven they may not allow agentic development, but i guarantee you there are people using AI tools to develop changesets.

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                    • distractions@mastodon.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                      distractions@mastodon.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                      distractions@mastodon.social
                      wrote last edited by
                      #76

                      @ariadne well, because the world already has been changed. That’s a historic hard fact. Pretending it hasn’t won’t stop the wheel from turning. Anyone can set up a new project on GitHub (or CodeBerg for that matter) and put anything up there, and if it somehow does the trick, people won’t care how it does. It’s sad, but that’s how things progress.

                      I believe it more worthwhile to harden our processes **around** and with gAI, not against it. Because the train will roll.

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