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  3. Can't tell you how many times I have heard about a friend's company needing to send an apology email to customers about downtime and flakiness due to AIgen commits that were poorly reviewed and misunderstood

Can't tell you how many times I have heard about a friend's company needing to send an apology email to customers about downtime and flakiness due to AIgen commits that were poorly reviewed and misunderstood

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  • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

    The slow part of software is NOT the initial generation of software. It's the maintenance and review of it.

    If your management is pushing for 10x programmer output, hell even 40% more programmer output, what they're asking for is a stability crisis. There's no way around it. That's how it is right now.

    littledetritus@geraffel.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
    littledetritus@geraffel.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
    littledetritus@geraffel.social
    wrote last edited by
    #10

    @cwebber What we are still lacking is a good taxonomy for maintenance.

    Whilst "new code" can be easily measured by "lines of code" or through "new features" there is no metric for maintenance.

    Because maintained code is a non-functional feature.

    @d3sre did some amazing work on the other non-functional feature info-sec, to make the work of SOCs visible, see:

    Link Preview Image
    GitHub - d3sre/IntelligentProcessLifecycle: The Intelligent Process Lifecycle of Active Cyber Defenders

    The Intelligent Process Lifecycle of Active Cyber Defenders - d3sre/IntelligentProcessLifecycle

    favicon

    GitHub (github.com)

    Would you happen to know if anyone works on this?

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    • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

      The slow part of software is NOT the initial generation of software. It's the maintenance and review of it.

      If your management is pushing for 10x programmer output, hell even 40% more programmer output, what they're asking for is a stability crisis. There's no way around it. That's how it is right now.

      thomasfuchs@hachyderm.ioT This user is from outside of this forum
      thomasfuchs@hachyderm.ioT This user is from outside of this forum
      thomasfuchs@hachyderm.io
      wrote last edited by
      #11

      @cwebber I posit that writing code itself is never the bottleneck (otherwise it would have been solved with cheap offshore programmers long ago).

      The hard work making software is designing it, including from a user experience point of view, your business needs and operational constraints.

      Using generative AI to add code you don’t understand (or worse, features you don’t know why you add them) will make all of these things cumulatively harder.

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      • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

        You can use these tools for red teaming (caveat: you will get a lot of false positives also). You can sort of use them for prototyping (though a lot of the value of understanding building through the prototyping process may be lost during that time; still, it is one place where things can increase). Those two categories don't create huge and unresolved copyright output questions in your codebase, and I think you can justify them.

        But if you're using them to actually write the software itself, you're borrowing against the future, against stability, and against institutional understanding of your own stack.

        bri7@social.treehouse.systemsB This user is from outside of this forum
        bri7@social.treehouse.systemsB This user is from outside of this forum
        bri7@social.treehouse.systems
        wrote last edited by
        #12

        @cwebber i had said it before about LLMs in other contexts, but a few videos i watched today made me realise this absolutely applies to the LLMs writing software case: It’s gambling addiction

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        • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

          The slow part of software is NOT the initial generation of software. It's the maintenance and review of it.

          If your management is pushing for 10x programmer output, hell even 40% more programmer output, what they're asking for is a stability crisis. There's no way around it. That's how it is right now.

          tamzin@wikis.worldT This user is from outside of this forum
          tamzin@wikis.worldT This user is from outside of this forum
          tamzin@wikis.world
          wrote last edited by
          #13

          @cwebber AI has proven very good at fixing two problems humanity didn't have: a shortage of labor and a shortage of cobbled-together first drafts of things being used in production.

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          • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

            You can use these tools for red teaming (caveat: you will get a lot of false positives also). You can sort of use them for prototyping (though a lot of the value of understanding building through the prototyping process may be lost during that time; still, it is one place where things can increase). Those two categories don't create huge and unresolved copyright output questions in your codebase, and I think you can justify them.

            But if you're using them to actually write the software itself, you're borrowing against the future, against stability, and against institutional understanding of your own stack.

            cwebber@social.coopC This user is from outside of this forum
            cwebber@social.coopC This user is from outside of this forum
            cwebber@social.coop
            wrote last edited by
            #14

            Oh yeah the other caveat about using them for prototyping, as @tamzin highlights below, is that "quickly thrown together prototypes" often become production code, to their authors' dismay.

            In many ways, whiteboard prototypes are much better, as they are immune from this problem.

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            • R relay@relay.infosec.exchange shared this topic
            • faoluin@chitter.xyzF This user is from outside of this forum
              faoluin@chitter.xyzF This user is from outside of this forum
              faoluin@chitter.xyz
              wrote last edited by
              #15

              @kaye @cwebber Deploy directly to prod from Microsoft Whiteboard™ using the power of Copilot™AI™

              silvermoon82@wandering.shopS 1 Reply Last reply
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              • cwebber@social.coopC This user is from outside of this forum
                cwebber@social.coopC This user is from outside of this forum
                cwebber@social.coop
                wrote last edited by
                #16

                @kaye curse you someone has a startup for this right now don't they

                michaeltbacon@social.coopM 1 Reply Last reply
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                • faoluin@chitter.xyzF faoluin@chitter.xyz

                  @kaye @cwebber Deploy directly to prod from Microsoft Whiteboard™ using the power of Copilot™AI™

                  silvermoon82@wandering.shopS This user is from outside of this forum
                  silvermoon82@wandering.shopS This user is from outside of this forum
                  silvermoon82@wandering.shop
                  wrote last edited by
                  #17

                  @faoluin @kaye @cwebber
                  Microsoft Copilot for Downtime

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                  • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

                    @kaye curse you someone has a startup for this right now don't they

                    michaeltbacon@social.coopM This user is from outside of this forum
                    michaeltbacon@social.coopM This user is from outside of this forum
                    michaeltbacon@social.coop
                    wrote last edited by
                    #18

                    @cwebber @kaye

                    Someone, somewhere is already taking a picture of a whiteboard and feeding it into a model, saying "build this."

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                    • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

                      The slow part of software is NOT the initial generation of software. It's the maintenance and review of it.

                      If your management is pushing for 10x programmer output, hell even 40% more programmer output, what they're asking for is a stability crisis. There's no way around it. That's how it is right now.

                      n1xnx@tilde.zoneN This user is from outside of this forum
                      n1xnx@tilde.zoneN This user is from outside of this forum
                      n1xnx@tilde.zone
                      wrote last edited by
                      #19

                      @cwebber
                      I want you to tattoo this onto some corporate executives...

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                      0
                      • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

                        The slow part of software is NOT the initial generation of software. It's the maintenance and review of it.

                        If your management is pushing for 10x programmer output, hell even 40% more programmer output, what they're asking for is a stability crisis. There's no way around it. That's how it is right now.

                        dvshkn@social.treehouse.systemsD This user is from outside of this forum
                        dvshkn@social.treehouse.systemsD This user is from outside of this forum
                        dvshkn@social.treehouse.systems
                        wrote last edited by
                        #20

                        @cwebber There's the GitHub nines, but I'm wondering when we will start seeing more hard numbers that things have generally gone to shit. The data is probably out there but siloed and guarded in hushed tones.

                        dvshkn@social.treehouse.systemsD 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • dvshkn@social.treehouse.systemsD dvshkn@social.treehouse.systems

                          @cwebber There's the GitHub nines, but I'm wondering when we will start seeing more hard numbers that things have generally gone to shit. The data is probably out there but siloed and guarded in hushed tones.

                          dvshkn@social.treehouse.systemsD This user is from outside of this forum
                          dvshkn@social.treehouse.systemsD This user is from outside of this forum
                          dvshkn@social.treehouse.systems
                          wrote last edited by
                          #21

                          @cwebber People would be right to point out that the start of the quality decline seemed to precede coding agents, but I think it's a bit of a perfect storm. My personal theory has been that it started with US interest rates going back up and austerity measures being introduced across the industry. Coding agents really meshed with that because everybody has been looking for areas to cut cost.

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