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  3. stray thought:

stray thought:

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  • Z This user is from outside of this forum
    Z This user is from outside of this forum
    zkat@toot.cat
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    stray thought:

    I've heard of the term "Software Engineer" referred to as being "stolen glory", because engineering as a practice has long had MUCH higher standards than software development, when it came to reliability/quality/etc, because the stakes were usually so much higher, and the study required for qualification were correspondingly high.

    LLMs seem to be leaning on this further: Software developers have embraced the idea that we can spit out any low-quality, unreliable, even straight-up dangerous garbage that, as long as it seems somewhat productive, is "valuable enough". They have dropped the floor on what we're able to achieve while deskilling many of us who at least were developing the skills required for quality production. Most importantly, they're making it so leadership actively discourages taking the actual time to make sure something won't fucking kill someone.

    I was looking at a certain open source project's page and there was a link to its associated consultancy. On the front page was a gif of a prompt for an app generator LLM utility, and the first fucking prompt that showed up was "Write me an application that will act as an X-ray analyzer, looking for anomalies and reporting on them", and that was just obviously the most fucking irresponsible thing I'd seen all day. Imagine having some non-expert just write something that will put people's actual lives on the line like that, and sell it as if it has any qualification to make reliable diagnostics. This is the level of brazen irresponsibility we're dealing with.

    astraluma@tacobelllabs.netA dave@alvarado.socialD luna@pony.socialL eramdam@social.erambert.meE silverwizard@convenient.emailS 8 Replies Last reply
    1
    0
    • Z zkat@toot.cat

      stray thought:

      I've heard of the term "Software Engineer" referred to as being "stolen glory", because engineering as a practice has long had MUCH higher standards than software development, when it came to reliability/quality/etc, because the stakes were usually so much higher, and the study required for qualification were correspondingly high.

      LLMs seem to be leaning on this further: Software developers have embraced the idea that we can spit out any low-quality, unreliable, even straight-up dangerous garbage that, as long as it seems somewhat productive, is "valuable enough". They have dropped the floor on what we're able to achieve while deskilling many of us who at least were developing the skills required for quality production. Most importantly, they're making it so leadership actively discourages taking the actual time to make sure something won't fucking kill someone.

      I was looking at a certain open source project's page and there was a link to its associated consultancy. On the front page was a gif of a prompt for an app generator LLM utility, and the first fucking prompt that showed up was "Write me an application that will act as an X-ray analyzer, looking for anomalies and reporting on them", and that was just obviously the most fucking irresponsible thing I'd seen all day. Imagine having some non-expert just write something that will put people's actual lives on the line like that, and sell it as if it has any qualification to make reliable diagnostics. This is the level of brazen irresponsibility we're dealing with.

      astraluma@tacobelllabs.netA This user is from outside of this forum
      astraluma@tacobelllabs.netA This user is from outside of this forum
      astraluma@tacobelllabs.net
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      @zkat thank you for reading my blog

      (i posted very similar thoughts yesterday)

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • Z zkat@toot.cat

        stray thought:

        I've heard of the term "Software Engineer" referred to as being "stolen glory", because engineering as a practice has long had MUCH higher standards than software development, when it came to reliability/quality/etc, because the stakes were usually so much higher, and the study required for qualification were correspondingly high.

        LLMs seem to be leaning on this further: Software developers have embraced the idea that we can spit out any low-quality, unreliable, even straight-up dangerous garbage that, as long as it seems somewhat productive, is "valuable enough". They have dropped the floor on what we're able to achieve while deskilling many of us who at least were developing the skills required for quality production. Most importantly, they're making it so leadership actively discourages taking the actual time to make sure something won't fucking kill someone.

        I was looking at a certain open source project's page and there was a link to its associated consultancy. On the front page was a gif of a prompt for an app generator LLM utility, and the first fucking prompt that showed up was "Write me an application that will act as an X-ray analyzer, looking for anomalies and reporting on them", and that was just obviously the most fucking irresponsible thing I'd seen all day. Imagine having some non-expert just write something that will put people's actual lives on the line like that, and sell it as if it has any qualification to make reliable diagnostics. This is the level of brazen irresponsibility we're dealing with.

        dave@alvarado.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
        dave@alvarado.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
        dave@alvarado.social
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        @zkat my I agree with all of this.

        My tl;dr has always been "Engineers are licensed. Software developers are not engineers."

        whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW danso@mtl.rocksD 2 Replies Last reply
        0
        • Z zkat@toot.cat

          stray thought:

          I've heard of the term "Software Engineer" referred to as being "stolen glory", because engineering as a practice has long had MUCH higher standards than software development, when it came to reliability/quality/etc, because the stakes were usually so much higher, and the study required for qualification were correspondingly high.

          LLMs seem to be leaning on this further: Software developers have embraced the idea that we can spit out any low-quality, unreliable, even straight-up dangerous garbage that, as long as it seems somewhat productive, is "valuable enough". They have dropped the floor on what we're able to achieve while deskilling many of us who at least were developing the skills required for quality production. Most importantly, they're making it so leadership actively discourages taking the actual time to make sure something won't fucking kill someone.

          I was looking at a certain open source project's page and there was a link to its associated consultancy. On the front page was a gif of a prompt for an app generator LLM utility, and the first fucking prompt that showed up was "Write me an application that will act as an X-ray analyzer, looking for anomalies and reporting on them", and that was just obviously the most fucking irresponsible thing I'd seen all day. Imagine having some non-expert just write something that will put people's actual lives on the line like that, and sell it as if it has any qualification to make reliable diagnostics. This is the level of brazen irresponsibility we're dealing with.

          luna@pony.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
          luna@pony.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
          luna@pony.social
          wrote last edited by
          #4

          @zkat I was thinking the exact same yesterday, and held back on posting because I couldn't find an eloquent way of phrasing it. You're absolutely right and it's terrifying.

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • Z zkat@toot.cat

            stray thought:

            I've heard of the term "Software Engineer" referred to as being "stolen glory", because engineering as a practice has long had MUCH higher standards than software development, when it came to reliability/quality/etc, because the stakes were usually so much higher, and the study required for qualification were correspondingly high.

            LLMs seem to be leaning on this further: Software developers have embraced the idea that we can spit out any low-quality, unreliable, even straight-up dangerous garbage that, as long as it seems somewhat productive, is "valuable enough". They have dropped the floor on what we're able to achieve while deskilling many of us who at least were developing the skills required for quality production. Most importantly, they're making it so leadership actively discourages taking the actual time to make sure something won't fucking kill someone.

            I was looking at a certain open source project's page and there was a link to its associated consultancy. On the front page was a gif of a prompt for an app generator LLM utility, and the first fucking prompt that showed up was "Write me an application that will act as an X-ray analyzer, looking for anomalies and reporting on them", and that was just obviously the most fucking irresponsible thing I'd seen all day. Imagine having some non-expert just write something that will put people's actual lives on the line like that, and sell it as if it has any qualification to make reliable diagnostics. This is the level of brazen irresponsibility we're dealing with.

            eramdam@social.erambert.meE This user is from outside of this forum
            eramdam@social.erambert.meE This user is from outside of this forum
            eramdam@social.erambert.me
            wrote last edited by
            #5

            @zkat yep

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • Z zkat@toot.cat

              stray thought:

              I've heard of the term "Software Engineer" referred to as being "stolen glory", because engineering as a practice has long had MUCH higher standards than software development, when it came to reliability/quality/etc, because the stakes were usually so much higher, and the study required for qualification were correspondingly high.

              LLMs seem to be leaning on this further: Software developers have embraced the idea that we can spit out any low-quality, unreliable, even straight-up dangerous garbage that, as long as it seems somewhat productive, is "valuable enough". They have dropped the floor on what we're able to achieve while deskilling many of us who at least were developing the skills required for quality production. Most importantly, they're making it so leadership actively discourages taking the actual time to make sure something won't fucking kill someone.

              I was looking at a certain open source project's page and there was a link to its associated consultancy. On the front page was a gif of a prompt for an app generator LLM utility, and the first fucking prompt that showed up was "Write me an application that will act as an X-ray analyzer, looking for anomalies and reporting on them", and that was just obviously the most fucking irresponsible thing I'd seen all day. Imagine having some non-expert just write something that will put people's actual lives on the line like that, and sell it as if it has any qualification to make reliable diagnostics. This is the level of brazen irresponsibility we're dealing with.

              silverwizard@convenient.emailS This user is from outside of this forum
              silverwizard@convenient.emailS This user is from outside of this forum
              silverwizard@convenient.email
              wrote last edited by
              #6
              @zkat Wait - is the actual plan to prompt "Make me a therac-25"?
              hypolite@friendica.mrpetovan.comH ingalovinde@embracing.spaceI 2 Replies Last reply
              0
              • Z zkat@toot.cat

                stray thought:

                I've heard of the term "Software Engineer" referred to as being "stolen glory", because engineering as a practice has long had MUCH higher standards than software development, when it came to reliability/quality/etc, because the stakes were usually so much higher, and the study required for qualification were correspondingly high.

                LLMs seem to be leaning on this further: Software developers have embraced the idea that we can spit out any low-quality, unreliable, even straight-up dangerous garbage that, as long as it seems somewhat productive, is "valuable enough". They have dropped the floor on what we're able to achieve while deskilling many of us who at least were developing the skills required for quality production. Most importantly, they're making it so leadership actively discourages taking the actual time to make sure something won't fucking kill someone.

                I was looking at a certain open source project's page and there was a link to its associated consultancy. On the front page was a gif of a prompt for an app generator LLM utility, and the first fucking prompt that showed up was "Write me an application that will act as an X-ray analyzer, looking for anomalies and reporting on them", and that was just obviously the most fucking irresponsible thing I'd seen all day. Imagine having some non-expert just write something that will put people's actual lives on the line like that, and sell it as if it has any qualification to make reliable diagnostics. This is the level of brazen irresponsibility we're dealing with.

                tbgp@mastodon.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
                tbgp@mastodon.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
                tbgp@mastodon.social
                wrote last edited by
                #7

                @zkat you said it perfectly. Imagine if software developers had to take the PE. Or sign off on their work etc.
                They hijacked the Engineer title and many CS grads I have met dont even enjoy the field. Its all just a cash grab of a position. Sad, really.

                kormachameleon@tech.lgbtK 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • silverwizard@convenient.emailS silverwizard@convenient.email
                  @zkat Wait - is the actual plan to prompt "Make me a therac-25"?
                  hypolite@friendica.mrpetovan.comH This user is from outside of this forum
                  hypolite@friendica.mrpetovan.comH This user is from outside of this forum
                  hypolite@friendica.mrpetovan.com
                  wrote last edited by
                  #8
                  @silverwizard @zkat No, it's more "I have no expertise in X-Ray picture analysis, so surely ChatGPT does!"
                  silverwizard@convenient.emailS 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • hypolite@friendica.mrpetovan.comH hypolite@friendica.mrpetovan.com
                    @silverwizard @zkat No, it's more "I have no expertise in X-Ray picture analysis, so surely ChatGPT does!"
                    silverwizard@convenient.emailS This user is from outside of this forum
                    silverwizard@convenient.emailS This user is from outside of this forum
                    silverwizard@convenient.email
                    wrote last edited by
                    #9
                    @hypolite @zkat Well fine - I'm sure medical imaging has no expertise or consequences. It's an easy field
                    hypolite@friendica.mrpetovan.comH 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • silverwizard@convenient.emailS silverwizard@convenient.email
                      @hypolite @zkat Well fine - I'm sure medical imaging has no expertise or consequences. It's an easy field
                      hypolite@friendica.mrpetovan.comH This user is from outside of this forum
                      hypolite@friendica.mrpetovan.comH This user is from outside of this forum
                      hypolite@friendica.mrpetovan.com
                      wrote last edited by
                      #10
                      @silverwizard @zkat Also even the current human-developed software for medical imaging analysis is rife with false positives. My partner did a scan recently and the automated analysis was added before the imaging technician comment, and they had to put in capitals that there was no cause for a specific concern raised by the automated system.
                      silverwizard@convenient.emailS 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • hypolite@friendica.mrpetovan.comH hypolite@friendica.mrpetovan.com
                        @silverwizard @zkat Also even the current human-developed software for medical imaging analysis is rife with false positives. My partner did a scan recently and the automated analysis was added before the imaging technician comment, and they had to put in capitals that there was no cause for a specific concern raised by the automated system.
                        silverwizard@convenient.emailS This user is from outside of this forum
                        silverwizard@convenient.emailS This user is from outside of this forum
                        silverwizard@convenient.email
                        wrote last edited by
                        #11
                        @hypolite @zkat Yeah - I mean - medical analysis imaging is always going to be rife with issues. Humans and software will both fail. So using the best software we can, working with trained humans, and not humans just doing mind numbing vigilance tasks.
                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • Z zkat@toot.cat

                          stray thought:

                          I've heard of the term "Software Engineer" referred to as being "stolen glory", because engineering as a practice has long had MUCH higher standards than software development, when it came to reliability/quality/etc, because the stakes were usually so much higher, and the study required for qualification were correspondingly high.

                          LLMs seem to be leaning on this further: Software developers have embraced the idea that we can spit out any low-quality, unreliable, even straight-up dangerous garbage that, as long as it seems somewhat productive, is "valuable enough". They have dropped the floor on what we're able to achieve while deskilling many of us who at least were developing the skills required for quality production. Most importantly, they're making it so leadership actively discourages taking the actual time to make sure something won't fucking kill someone.

                          I was looking at a certain open source project's page and there was a link to its associated consultancy. On the front page was a gif of a prompt for an app generator LLM utility, and the first fucking prompt that showed up was "Write me an application that will act as an X-ray analyzer, looking for anomalies and reporting on them", and that was just obviously the most fucking irresponsible thing I'd seen all day. Imagine having some non-expert just write something that will put people's actual lives on the line like that, and sell it as if it has any qualification to make reliable diagnostics. This is the level of brazen irresponsibility we're dealing with.

                          desea@akko.cuddlegirls.cafeD This user is from outside of this forum
                          desea@akko.cuddlegirls.cafeD This user is from outside of this forum
                          desea@akko.cuddlegirls.cafe
                          wrote last edited by
                          #12
                          @zkat thats surrendering the idea of what software should be to the worst actors though, large corporations want software to be irresponsible so its normal for things to fail and not directly their fault, shit like spaceflight computers and most earlier computer engineering id actually say qualifies as such without being 'stolen valor' or what have you, calling it that is succumbing to the lowered standard companies are trying to get away with rather than pointing out correctly that theyre dragging our expectations down to their profit margins so nobody ever even gets the idea of holding them accountable for shit software because 'software is just like this'
                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • dave@alvarado.socialD dave@alvarado.social

                            @zkat my I agree with all of this.

                            My tl;dr has always been "Engineers are licensed. Software developers are not engineers."

                            whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW This user is from outside of this forum
                            whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW This user is from outside of this forum
                            whitequark@social.treehouse.systems
                            wrote last edited by
                            #13

                            @dave @zkat are electrical engineers not engineers, then? I know a lot of people working as an EE (whether with a formal education or not) and not a single one of them has a license.

                            dave@alvarado.socialD 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • tbgp@mastodon.socialT tbgp@mastodon.social

                              @zkat you said it perfectly. Imagine if software developers had to take the PE. Or sign off on their work etc.
                              They hijacked the Engineer title and many CS grads I have met dont even enjoy the field. Its all just a cash grab of a position. Sad, really.

                              kormachameleon@tech.lgbtK This user is from outside of this forum
                              kormachameleon@tech.lgbtK This user is from outside of this forum
                              kormachameleon@tech.lgbt
                              wrote last edited by
                              #14

                              @tbgp @zkat companies hijacked the engineer title. I'm a programmer. The people who pay me write software engineer on the paperwork. I never asked for that, and I can't change it

                              tbgp@mastodon.socialT 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • kormachameleon@tech.lgbtK kormachameleon@tech.lgbt

                                @tbgp @zkat companies hijacked the engineer title. I'm a programmer. The people who pay me write software engineer on the paperwork. I never asked for that, and I can't change it

                                tbgp@mastodon.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
                                tbgp@mastodon.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
                                tbgp@mastodon.social
                                wrote last edited by
                                #15

                                @KormaChameleon @zkat I guess my point is: its a very human problem. I don't mean you or techies specifically.

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW whitequark@social.treehouse.systems

                                  @dave @zkat are electrical engineers not engineers, then? I know a lot of people working as an EE (whether with a formal education or not) and not a single one of them has a license.

                                  dave@alvarado.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                                  dave@alvarado.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                                  dave@alvarado.social
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #16

                                  @whitequark @zkat the ones with their PE licenses are. The others have a misleading job title, like "software engineer".

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • silverwizard@convenient.emailS silverwizard@convenient.email
                                    @zkat Wait - is the actual plan to prompt "Make me a therac-25"?
                                    ingalovinde@embracing.spaceI This user is from outside of this forum
                                    ingalovinde@embracing.spaceI This user is from outside of this forum
                                    ingalovinde@embracing.space
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #17

                                    @silverwizard @zkat literally: https://tech.lgbt/@Lydie/116121680815038994

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • dave@alvarado.socialD dave@alvarado.social

                                      @zkat my I agree with all of this.

                                      My tl;dr has always been "Engineers are licensed. Software developers are not engineers."

                                      danso@mtl.rocksD This user is from outside of this forum
                                      danso@mtl.rocksD This user is from outside of this forum
                                      danso@mtl.rocks
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #18

                                      @dave@alvarado.social @zkat@toot.cat I don't know how it is where you are, but here in Québec to be employed as an "engineer" you need to be a member of the Order of Engineers. "Engineer" is regulated, "developer" and "programmer" are not.

                                      But... Software engineers and software developers sit side-by-side in the office and do the same work to the same standards for the same compensation. I'm not sure there's any difference in practice.

                                      When my employer was informed that it was illegally hiring software engineers, I had to sign a new contract with a different title, everything else stayed exactly the same.

                                      dave@alvarado.socialD 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • Z zkat@toot.cat

                                        stray thought:

                                        I've heard of the term "Software Engineer" referred to as being "stolen glory", because engineering as a practice has long had MUCH higher standards than software development, when it came to reliability/quality/etc, because the stakes were usually so much higher, and the study required for qualification were correspondingly high.

                                        LLMs seem to be leaning on this further: Software developers have embraced the idea that we can spit out any low-quality, unreliable, even straight-up dangerous garbage that, as long as it seems somewhat productive, is "valuable enough". They have dropped the floor on what we're able to achieve while deskilling many of us who at least were developing the skills required for quality production. Most importantly, they're making it so leadership actively discourages taking the actual time to make sure something won't fucking kill someone.

                                        I was looking at a certain open source project's page and there was a link to its associated consultancy. On the front page was a gif of a prompt for an app generator LLM utility, and the first fucking prompt that showed up was "Write me an application that will act as an X-ray analyzer, looking for anomalies and reporting on them", and that was just obviously the most fucking irresponsible thing I'd seen all day. Imagine having some non-expert just write something that will put people's actual lives on the line like that, and sell it as if it has any qualification to make reliable diagnostics. This is the level of brazen irresponsibility we're dealing with.

                                        crazyeddie@mastodon.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                                        crazyeddie@mastodon.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                                        crazyeddie@mastodon.social
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #19

                                        @zkat Management would rather document some human process that triple checks your build and release process hasn't produced a blob that is too big for the partition and depend on that alone to avoid overwriting the next partition containing the backup in a device that's surgically embedded in someone than implement any checks in the tools that perform that writing because that would then have to be designed, documented, risk analyzed, tested, requirements traced...

                                        Fuck me the overdesigner.

                                        crazyeddie@mastodon.socialC 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • danso@mtl.rocksD danso@mtl.rocks

                                          @dave@alvarado.social @zkat@toot.cat I don't know how it is where you are, but here in Québec to be employed as an "engineer" you need to be a member of the Order of Engineers. "Engineer" is regulated, "developer" and "programmer" are not.

                                          But... Software engineers and software developers sit side-by-side in the office and do the same work to the same standards for the same compensation. I'm not sure there's any difference in practice.

                                          When my employer was informed that it was illegally hiring software engineers, I had to sign a new contract with a different title, everything else stayed exactly the same.

                                          dave@alvarado.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                                          dave@alvarado.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                                          dave@alvarado.social
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #20

                                          @danso @zkat we have something similar in the US, but without the legal restriction on using the word "engineer" in all job titles.

                                          https://www.nspe.org/about/about-professional-engineering/what-pe

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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