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  3. My own take on this is that neither quality or efficiency are at issue at all.

My own take on this is that neither quality or efficiency are at issue at all.

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  • mhoye@cosocial.caM This user is from outside of this forum
    mhoye@cosocial.caM This user is from outside of this forum
    mhoye@cosocial.ca
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    My own take on this is that neither quality or efficiency are at issue at all. The issue is monopoly, false incentive structures, proxy metrics and the what happens when people fail up far enough that there's no meaningful down anymore.

    Paul Cantrell (@inthehands@hachyderm.io)

    Hearing the feelings in this rant, which does touch a nerve, I can’t help think about how different the developer community reaction to the LLM push might be if the focus were on quality instead of efficiency. 1/

    favicon

    Hachyderm.io (hachyderm.io)

    mhoye@cosocial.caM 1 Reply Last reply
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    • mhoye@cosocial.caM mhoye@cosocial.ca

      My own take on this is that neither quality or efficiency are at issue at all. The issue is monopoly, false incentive structures, proxy metrics and the what happens when people fail up far enough that there's no meaningful down anymore.

      Paul Cantrell (@inthehands@hachyderm.io)

      Hearing the feelings in this rant, which does touch a nerve, I can’t help think about how different the developer community reaction to the LLM push might be if the focus were on quality instead of efficiency. 1/

      favicon

      Hachyderm.io (hachyderm.io)

      mhoye@cosocial.caM This user is from outside of this forum
      mhoye@cosocial.caM This user is from outside of this forum
      mhoye@cosocial.ca
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      Despite the law bearing his name, Goodhart didn't actually say "once a measure becomes a target it stops being a useful measure." What he said was that "Any observed statistical regularity will tend to collapse once pressure is placed upon it for control purposes", and the part of that that we don't talk about nearly enough is "for control purposes"; the implied question that's quietly (and conveniently, I think) elided in the simplified rephrase is "control of what, by who, and to what end."

      mhoye@cosocial.caM 1 Reply Last reply
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      • mhoye@cosocial.caM mhoye@cosocial.ca

        Despite the law bearing his name, Goodhart didn't actually say "once a measure becomes a target it stops being a useful measure." What he said was that "Any observed statistical regularity will tend to collapse once pressure is placed upon it for control purposes", and the part of that that we don't talk about nearly enough is "for control purposes"; the implied question that's quietly (and conveniently, I think) elided in the simplified rephrase is "control of what, by who, and to what end."

        mhoye@cosocial.caM This user is from outside of this forum
        mhoye@cosocial.caM This user is from outside of this forum
        mhoye@cosocial.ca
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        It's an old adage that the poor pay taxes, the well-off pay accountants, the rich pay lawyers and the ultra-rich pay politicians.

        Another way to say that is, the poor pay what they're forced to, the well-off pay what they have to, the rich pay what they can be made to, and the ultra rich pay to be above any of that.

        To the powerless, the rules define the game. Higher up, the rules are part of the game. If you're powerful enough, the rules _are_ the game.

        The ultrarich own the stadium.

        netopwibby@social.coopN mhoye@cosocial.caM 2 Replies Last reply
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        • mhoye@cosocial.caM mhoye@cosocial.ca

          It's an old adage that the poor pay taxes, the well-off pay accountants, the rich pay lawyers and the ultra-rich pay politicians.

          Another way to say that is, the poor pay what they're forced to, the well-off pay what they have to, the rich pay what they can be made to, and the ultra rich pay to be above any of that.

          To the powerless, the rules define the game. Higher up, the rules are part of the game. If you're powerful enough, the rules _are_ the game.

          The ultrarich own the stadium.

          netopwibby@social.coopN This user is from outside of this forum
          netopwibby@social.coopN This user is from outside of this forum
          netopwibby@social.coop
          wrote last edited by
          #4

          @mhoye Damn!

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • mhoye@cosocial.caM mhoye@cosocial.ca

            It's an old adage that the poor pay taxes, the well-off pay accountants, the rich pay lawyers and the ultra-rich pay politicians.

            Another way to say that is, the poor pay what they're forced to, the well-off pay what they have to, the rich pay what they can be made to, and the ultra rich pay to be above any of that.

            To the powerless, the rules define the game. Higher up, the rules are part of the game. If you're powerful enough, the rules _are_ the game.

            The ultrarich own the stadium.

            mhoye@cosocial.caM This user is from outside of this forum
            mhoye@cosocial.caM This user is from outside of this forum
            mhoye@cosocial.ca
            wrote last edited by
            #5

            "The ultrarich own the stadium" in this AI vibecoding world means they decide how many seats you need to sell to keep playing, what kind of events are allowed and aren't. And those metrics just trickle down into targets, goals, KPIs, lines of code. All of it with made up stories about what success looks like or means - quality, velocity, who cares what - that people make up to avoid staring at the fact that it's all made up but you lose your house if you don't perform your belief hard enough.

            mhoye@cosocial.caM 1 Reply Last reply
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            • mhoye@cosocial.caM mhoye@cosocial.ca

              "The ultrarich own the stadium" in this AI vibecoding world means they decide how many seats you need to sell to keep playing, what kind of events are allowed and aren't. And those metrics just trickle down into targets, goals, KPIs, lines of code. All of it with made up stories about what success looks like or means - quality, velocity, who cares what - that people make up to avoid staring at the fact that it's all made up but you lose your house if you don't perform your belief hard enough.

              mhoye@cosocial.caM This user is from outside of this forum
              mhoye@cosocial.caM This user is from outside of this forum
              mhoye@cosocial.ca
              wrote last edited by
              #6

              When we saw the huge Return To Office Return To Normal push, You Will Be Measured By Days Of Your Butt In A Desk... where did that come from, fast and hard?

              True story: it came from companies whose boards and major shareholders had enormous investments in corporate real estate. It came from the people who owned the stadium, and saw that their stadium might lose its value.

              For the rest The Rules now included Incomprehensible RTO Mandates and leaders making up fantasies about productivity.

              mhoye@cosocial.caM dmarti@federate.socialD nini@oldbytes.spaceN justin@mastodon.tacoma.communityJ 4 Replies Last reply
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              • mhoye@cosocial.caM mhoye@cosocial.ca

                When we saw the huge Return To Office Return To Normal push, You Will Be Measured By Days Of Your Butt In A Desk... where did that come from, fast and hard?

                True story: it came from companies whose boards and major shareholders had enormous investments in corporate real estate. It came from the people who owned the stadium, and saw that their stadium might lose its value.

                For the rest The Rules now included Incomprehensible RTO Mandates and leaders making up fantasies about productivity.

                mhoye@cosocial.caM This user is from outside of this forum
                mhoye@cosocial.caM This user is from outside of this forum
                mhoye@cosocial.ca
                wrote last edited by
                #7

                Today, software is - already - everywhere and in everything. There's no evidence that there's a meaningful place to put new software that will justify continuous 30% year over year growth, and if tech companies - whose stock values are predicated on 30%+ annual growth forever - don't see that growth, they're going to dramatically lose their value. But there's this one way to keep the consumption rate up, to keep these plates spinning another year or two, evidence of real utility be damned.

                mhoye@cosocial.caM 1 Reply Last reply
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                • mhoye@cosocial.caM mhoye@cosocial.ca

                  When we saw the huge Return To Office Return To Normal push, You Will Be Measured By Days Of Your Butt In A Desk... where did that come from, fast and hard?

                  True story: it came from companies whose boards and major shareholders had enormous investments in corporate real estate. It came from the people who owned the stadium, and saw that their stadium might lose its value.

                  For the rest The Rules now included Incomprehensible RTO Mandates and leaders making up fantasies about productivity.

                  dmarti@federate.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                  dmarti@federate.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                  dmarti@federate.social
                  wrote last edited by
                  #8

                  @mhoye Good point. The housing shortage is also part of that—the workforce must be forced to have household budgets and schedules under strain at all times. (The founders of today's dominant companies got started using the slack that was allowed by the previous generation of companies, and do all they can to deny it to potential challengers.)

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • mhoye@cosocial.caM mhoye@cosocial.ca

                    Today, software is - already - everywhere and in everything. There's no evidence that there's a meaningful place to put new software that will justify continuous 30% year over year growth, and if tech companies - whose stock values are predicated on 30%+ annual growth forever - don't see that growth, they're going to dramatically lose their value. But there's this one way to keep the consumption rate up, to keep these plates spinning another year or two, evidence of real utility be damned.

                    mhoye@cosocial.caM This user is from outside of this forum
                    mhoye@cosocial.caM This user is from outside of this forum
                    mhoye@cosocial.ca
                    wrote last edited by
                    #9

                    "Failing upwards" isn't real. People don't fail upward, we just call it that because the alternative - that they are succeeding at the pointless bullshit that's defined as success - means the work we do, the source of identity and meaning for so many of us, might also be pointless bullshit.

                    It's easier to make up a story that gives us an adversary than admit that we're trapped inside and complicit in the same process of anti-meaning.

                    AI Psychosis isn't really about AI. It's about meaning.

                    aburka@hachyderm.ioA mhoye@cosocial.caM lritter@mastodon.gamedev.placeL 3 Replies Last reply
                    0
                    • mhoye@cosocial.caM mhoye@cosocial.ca

                      "Failing upwards" isn't real. People don't fail upward, we just call it that because the alternative - that they are succeeding at the pointless bullshit that's defined as success - means the work we do, the source of identity and meaning for so many of us, might also be pointless bullshit.

                      It's easier to make up a story that gives us an adversary than admit that we're trapped inside and complicit in the same process of anti-meaning.

                      AI Psychosis isn't really about AI. It's about meaning.

                      aburka@hachyderm.ioA This user is from outside of this forum
                      aburka@hachyderm.ioA This user is from outside of this forum
                      aburka@hachyderm.io
                      wrote last edited by
                      #10

                      @mhoye are you sure it's not real? because I'm a great developer but I've been promoted such that I also have management responsibilities, which I suck at

                      mhoye@cosocial.caM 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • mhoye@cosocial.caM mhoye@cosocial.ca

                        "Failing upwards" isn't real. People don't fail upward, we just call it that because the alternative - that they are succeeding at the pointless bullshit that's defined as success - means the work we do, the source of identity and meaning for so many of us, might also be pointless bullshit.

                        It's easier to make up a story that gives us an adversary than admit that we're trapped inside and complicit in the same process of anti-meaning.

                        AI Psychosis isn't really about AI. It's about meaning.

                        mhoye@cosocial.caM This user is from outside of this forum
                        mhoye@cosocial.caM This user is from outside of this forum
                        mhoye@cosocial.ca
                        wrote last edited by
                        #11

                        I mean, it doesn't help that the chatbot says you're great and doing well and absolutely right. That part is particularly sinister.

                        But when I see people in the grips of this shit I don't see naivete or idiocy or mendacity so much as I see people who've found themselves trapped in a cult of their own personality. But the rules of that cult, the ceremonies, everything defining it has been out of their control and has been forever.

                        And the only alternative they have is confronting that.

                        mhoye@cosocial.caM samiamsam@mastodon.socialS 2 Replies Last reply
                        0
                        • mhoye@cosocial.caM mhoye@cosocial.ca

                          I mean, it doesn't help that the chatbot says you're great and doing well and absolutely right. That part is particularly sinister.

                          But when I see people in the grips of this shit I don't see naivete or idiocy or mendacity so much as I see people who've found themselves trapped in a cult of their own personality. But the rules of that cult, the ceremonies, everything defining it has been out of their control and has been forever.

                          And the only alternative they have is confronting that.

                          mhoye@cosocial.caM This user is from outside of this forum
                          mhoye@cosocial.caM This user is from outside of this forum
                          mhoye@cosocial.ca
                          wrote last edited by
                          #12

                          We're all adults, we've all gotta make our own choices and we're responsible for them, I get it, but so much of tech has always looked kind of like a cult, certainly prone to cult like tendencies, and maybe AI psychosis is what psychological abuse would look like, over a long enough time horizon, if it were just slow enough that people's ability to see themselves, or see outside themselves, or define themselves outside the metrics and targets, was - deliberately - atrophied long enough.

                          mhoye@cosocial.caM richpuchalsky@mastodon.socialR 2 Replies Last reply
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                          • aburka@hachyderm.ioA aburka@hachyderm.io

                            @mhoye are you sure it's not real? because I'm a great developer but I've been promoted such that I also have management responsibilities, which I suck at

                            mhoye@cosocial.caM This user is from outside of this forum
                            mhoye@cosocial.caM This user is from outside of this forum
                            mhoye@cosocial.ca
                            wrote last edited by
                            #13

                            @aburka Yeah, I misspoke - that should have read "failing upwards", not "the peter principle". I've corrected it.

                            aburka@hachyderm.ioA 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • mhoye@cosocial.caM mhoye@cosocial.ca

                              @aburka Yeah, I misspoke - that should have read "failing upwards", not "the peter principle". I've corrected it.

                              aburka@hachyderm.ioA This user is from outside of this forum
                              aburka@hachyderm.ioA This user is from outside of this forum
                              aburka@hachyderm.io
                              wrote last edited by
                              #14

                              @mhoye ah okay yeah. I was going to say those weren't the same but thought you might have been trying to give two examples

                              1 Reply Last reply
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                              • mhoye@cosocial.caM mhoye@cosocial.ca

                                We're all adults, we've all gotta make our own choices and we're responsible for them, I get it, but so much of tech has always looked kind of like a cult, certainly prone to cult like tendencies, and maybe AI psychosis is what psychological abuse would look like, over a long enough time horizon, if it were just slow enough that people's ability to see themselves, or see outside themselves, or define themselves outside the metrics and targets, was - deliberately - atrophied long enough.

                                mhoye@cosocial.caM This user is from outside of this forum
                                mhoye@cosocial.caM This user is from outside of this forum
                                mhoye@cosocial.ca
                                wrote last edited by
                                #15

                                When the metrics by which you have defined yourself have been turned into a way to to target your identity, are they still useful metrics?

                                Useful to who? To what end? And what do you do, then?

                                If your sense of self has this much pressure is being placed upon it for control purposes, where do you find time to ask, control of what, by who, and to what end? What are the alternatives _but_ collapse?

                                1 Reply Last reply
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                                • mhoye@cosocial.caM mhoye@cosocial.ca

                                  I mean, it doesn't help that the chatbot says you're great and doing well and absolutely right. That part is particularly sinister.

                                  But when I see people in the grips of this shit I don't see naivete or idiocy or mendacity so much as I see people who've found themselves trapped in a cult of their own personality. But the rules of that cult, the ceremonies, everything defining it has been out of their control and has been forever.

                                  And the only alternative they have is confronting that.

                                  samiamsam@mastodon.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
                                  samiamsam@mastodon.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
                                  samiamsam@mastodon.social
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #16

                                  @mhoye

                                  chatbots are basically blowing smoke up your own ass

                                  yikes

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • mhoye@cosocial.caM mhoye@cosocial.ca

                                    We're all adults, we've all gotta make our own choices and we're responsible for them, I get it, but so much of tech has always looked kind of like a cult, certainly prone to cult like tendencies, and maybe AI psychosis is what psychological abuse would look like, over a long enough time horizon, if it were just slow enough that people's ability to see themselves, or see outside themselves, or define themselves outside the metrics and targets, was - deliberately - atrophied long enough.

                                    richpuchalsky@mastodon.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
                                    richpuchalsky@mastodon.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
                                    richpuchalsky@mastodon.social
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #17

                                    @mhoye

                                    Rich Puchalsky ⩜⃝ (@richpuchalsky@mastodon.social)

                                    There is no such thing as AI psychosis. There are a few people going through ordinary psychosis at any time who, during this, interact with an AI. All the rest of it is: the worst people you've worked with on a programming project, who didn't ever seem like they knew what they were doing, now still doing know what they're doing but because of AI they think that they do to a greater extent.

                                    favicon

                                    Mastodon (mastodon.social)

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                                    • mhoye@cosocial.caM mhoye@cosocial.ca

                                      "Failing upwards" isn't real. People don't fail upward, we just call it that because the alternative - that they are succeeding at the pointless bullshit that's defined as success - means the work we do, the source of identity and meaning for so many of us, might also be pointless bullshit.

                                      It's easier to make up a story that gives us an adversary than admit that we're trapped inside and complicit in the same process of anti-meaning.

                                      AI Psychosis isn't really about AI. It's about meaning.

                                      lritter@mastodon.gamedev.placeL This user is from outside of this forum
                                      lritter@mastodon.gamedev.placeL This user is from outside of this forum
                                      lritter@mastodon.gamedev.place
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #18

                                      @mhoye oh i've personally witnessed someone failing upwards once but that was ages ago.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • mhoye@cosocial.caM mhoye@cosocial.ca

                                        When we saw the huge Return To Office Return To Normal push, You Will Be Measured By Days Of Your Butt In A Desk... where did that come from, fast and hard?

                                        True story: it came from companies whose boards and major shareholders had enormous investments in corporate real estate. It came from the people who owned the stadium, and saw that their stadium might lose its value.

                                        For the rest The Rules now included Incomprehensible RTO Mandates and leaders making up fantasies about productivity.

                                        nini@oldbytes.spaceN This user is from outside of this forum
                                        nini@oldbytes.spaceN This user is from outside of this forum
                                        nini@oldbytes.space
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #19

                                        @mhoye The whole "return to normal" was due to corporate panic and the fact that people simply didn't need to work in the old ways which lowered the corporate control over their workers. Nope, wouldn't do, get everyone back in and show them who's boss.

                                        For a brief moment, the worker had power over their daily lives and could have demanded more equitable working situations, that struck fear in the paymasters so return to normal it was, make up something about "the economy" meaning shareholder value and away they went.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • mhoye@cosocial.caM mhoye@cosocial.ca

                                          When we saw the huge Return To Office Return To Normal push, You Will Be Measured By Days Of Your Butt In A Desk... where did that come from, fast and hard?

                                          True story: it came from companies whose boards and major shareholders had enormous investments in corporate real estate. It came from the people who owned the stadium, and saw that their stadium might lose its value.

                                          For the rest The Rules now included Incomprehensible RTO Mandates and leaders making up fantasies about productivity.

                                          justin@mastodon.tacoma.communityJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                          justin@mastodon.tacoma.communityJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                          justin@mastodon.tacoma.community
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #20

                                          @mhoye
                                          Don't forget the tax breaks the companies get on leases etc but have to maintain certain % occupancy. (At least that's what I had been told)

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