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  3. LLMs exaggerate and exacerbate existing market and industry dysfunctions.

LLMs exaggerate and exacerbate existing market and industry dysfunctions.

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  • baldur@toot.cafeB baldur@toot.cafe

    There is little to no downside to poor software quality and the upside of doing the job well is limited compared to tactics like lock-in, dishonest subscription models, and monopolies

    Some corners of the software industry are less affected. Others, such as web dev, are more affected

    For example, the stock price for Crowdstrike, even in a stock market affected by the Iran war, is up 12% today over its peak before it

    Massive worldwide economic harm, no real consequences

    baldur@toot.cafeB This user is from outside of this forum
    baldur@toot.cafeB This user is from outside of this forum
    baldur@toot.cafe
    wrote last edited by
    #4

    This has led to a field whose standard practices are a cluster of bad habits and superstition. Most of the ideas of user-centred design are alien to modern devs. Misconceptions about test-driven dev abound.

    When devs says that LLMs make them more productive, you need to keep in mind that THIS is what they're automating: dysfunction, tampering as a design strategy, superstition-driven coding, and software whose quality genuinely doesn't matter

    baldur@toot.cafeB nfnitloop@mastodon.socialN 2 Replies Last reply
    0
    • baldur@toot.cafeB baldur@toot.cafe

      This has led to a field whose standard practices are a cluster of bad habits and superstition. Most of the ideas of user-centred design are alien to modern devs. Misconceptions about test-driven dev abound.

      When devs says that LLMs make them more productive, you need to keep in mind that THIS is what they're automating: dysfunction, tampering as a design strategy, superstition-driven coding, and software whose quality genuinely doesn't matter

      baldur@toot.cafeB This user is from outside of this forum
      baldur@toot.cafeB This user is from outside of this forum
      baldur@toot.cafe
      wrote last edited by
      #5

      And they are right. LLMs make it easier for devs to do work that doesn't matter in an industry that doesn't care, where the only thing that's measured is some bullshit measure that's disconnected from actual outcomes

      Many of those most vocal about the dysfunctions of LLM-coding were ALREADY WARNING ABOUT THE DYSFUNCTIONS OF THE SOFTWARE INDUSTRY BEFORE "AI". The dysfunctions predate this particular bubble and many in software have been concerned about them for years.

      baldur@toot.cafeB 1 Reply Last reply
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      • baldur@toot.cafeB baldur@toot.cafe

        And they are right. LLMs make it easier for devs to do work that doesn't matter in an industry that doesn't care, where the only thing that's measured is some bullshit measure that's disconnected from actual outcomes

        Many of those most vocal about the dysfunctions of LLM-coding were ALREADY WARNING ABOUT THE DYSFUNCTIONS OF THE SOFTWARE INDUSTRY BEFORE "AI". The dysfunctions predate this particular bubble and many in software have been concerned about them for years.

        baldur@toot.cafeB This user is from outside of this forum
        baldur@toot.cafeB This user is from outside of this forum
        baldur@toot.cafe
        wrote last edited by
        #6

        Equally, most those most vocal about the benefits of LLM-coding were bullish about dev before the bubble. They didn't see the flaws of the earlier state of affairs so they don't see what's wrong with magnifying that dysfunction 10x

        Hence the divide in the discourse

        Both see LLMs as a mechanism for scaling up existing software practices with minimal human observation

        One group thinks this'll make the world 10x richer. The other thinks it'll be a catastrophe

        baldur@toot.cafeB 1 Reply Last reply
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        • baldur@toot.cafeB baldur@toot.cafe

          Equally, most those most vocal about the benefits of LLM-coding were bullish about dev before the bubble. They didn't see the flaws of the earlier state of affairs so they don't see what's wrong with magnifying that dysfunction 10x

          Hence the divide in the discourse

          Both see LLMs as a mechanism for scaling up existing software practices with minimal human observation

          One group thinks this'll make the world 10x richer. The other thinks it'll be a catastrophe

          baldur@toot.cafeB This user is from outside of this forum
          baldur@toot.cafeB This user is from outside of this forum
          baldur@toot.cafe
          wrote last edited by
          #7

          There is nothing either group can say to the other to shift them because the disagreement is down to a fundamental difference in world view

          But if you aren't in tech and are wondering which to trust, just ask yourself: do you really think the chucklefucks of tech, the clowns who have been running the show over the past couple of decades, have got coding completely figured out?

          /end

          1hommeazerty@mamot.fr1 mattly@hachyderm.ioM aedius@lavraievie.socialA neilk@xoxo.zoneN cap_ybarra@beige.partyC 8 Replies Last reply
          0
          • baldur@toot.cafeB baldur@toot.cafe

            There is nothing either group can say to the other to shift them because the disagreement is down to a fundamental difference in world view

            But if you aren't in tech and are wondering which to trust, just ask yourself: do you really think the chucklefucks of tech, the clowns who have been running the show over the past couple of decades, have got coding completely figured out?

            /end

            1hommeazerty@mamot.fr1 This user is from outside of this forum
            1hommeazerty@mamot.fr1 This user is from outside of this forum
            1hommeazerty@mamot.fr
            wrote last edited by
            #8

            @baldur Great thread!

            baldur@toot.cafeB 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • baldur@toot.cafeB baldur@toot.cafe

              This has led to a field whose standard practices are a cluster of bad habits and superstition. Most of the ideas of user-centred design are alien to modern devs. Misconceptions about test-driven dev abound.

              When devs says that LLMs make them more productive, you need to keep in mind that THIS is what they're automating: dysfunction, tampering as a design strategy, superstition-driven coding, and software whose quality genuinely doesn't matter

              nfnitloop@mastodon.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
              nfnitloop@mastodon.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
              nfnitloop@mastodon.social
              wrote last edited by
              #9

              @baldur re "superstition-drive coding", my favorite term for that for a long while has been:

              Link Preview Image
              Cargo cult programming - Wikipedia

              favicon

              (en.wikipedia.org)

              Rereading the Wikipedia definition in the new context of LLMs is enlightening:

              > The term cargo cult programmer may apply when anyone inexperienced with the problem at hand copies some program code from one place to another with little understanding of how it works or whether it is required.

              baldur@toot.cafeB 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • 1hommeazerty@mamot.fr1 1hommeazerty@mamot.fr

                @baldur Great thread!

                baldur@toot.cafeB This user is from outside of this forum
                baldur@toot.cafeB This user is from outside of this forum
                baldur@toot.cafe
                wrote last edited by
                #10

                @1HommeAzerty Thanks!

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • nfnitloop@mastodon.socialN nfnitloop@mastodon.social

                  @baldur re "superstition-drive coding", my favorite term for that for a long while has been:

                  Link Preview Image
                  Cargo cult programming - Wikipedia

                  favicon

                  (en.wikipedia.org)

                  Rereading the Wikipedia definition in the new context of LLMs is enlightening:

                  > The term cargo cult programmer may apply when anyone inexperienced with the problem at hand copies some program code from one place to another with little understanding of how it works or whether it is required.

                  baldur@toot.cafeB This user is from outside of this forum
                  baldur@toot.cafeB This user is from outside of this forum
                  baldur@toot.cafe
                  wrote last edited by
                  #11

                  @NfNitLoop Yup.

                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • baldur@toot.cafeB baldur@toot.cafe

                    There is nothing either group can say to the other to shift them because the disagreement is down to a fundamental difference in world view

                    But if you aren't in tech and are wondering which to trust, just ask yourself: do you really think the chucklefucks of tech, the clowns who have been running the show over the past couple of decades, have got coding completely figured out?

                    /end

                    mattly@hachyderm.ioM This user is from outside of this forum
                    mattly@hachyderm.ioM This user is from outside of this forum
                    mattly@hachyderm.io
                    wrote last edited by
                    #12

                    @baldur please write this up on your site, it’s gold

                    baldur@toot.cafeB 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • baldur@toot.cafeB baldur@toot.cafe

                      Our current software crisis—we've had a few—has been ramping up IMO since the post-2007 bailouts. Instead of regulating finance, the US let the finance industry take over, which hasn't been great overall, but for software it's meant that "quality" stopped mattering

                      Well-funded startups capture market share with subsidised products.

                      Big tech is a cluster of oligopolies and monopolies.

                      Internal software projects are driven by their potential effects on stock prices

                      nielsa@mas.toN This user is from outside of this forum
                      nielsa@mas.toN This user is from outside of this forum
                      nielsa@mas.to
                      wrote last edited by
                      #13

                      @baldur This is the only time I've seen someone clearly articulate the state of the industry. The way I usually frame this is in terms of wasted creative potential in developers being captured by hypercapitalized companies, making them work on uninteresting and unimportant problems, to enable the company to capture shares of some transient market... while many real, interesting problems remain unsolved.

                      nielsa@mas.toN 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • baldur@toot.cafeB baldur@toot.cafe

                        Our current software crisis—we've had a few—has been ramping up IMO since the post-2007 bailouts. Instead of regulating finance, the US let the finance industry take over, which hasn't been great overall, but for software it's meant that "quality" stopped mattering

                        Well-funded startups capture market share with subsidised products.

                        Big tech is a cluster of oligopolies and monopolies.

                        Internal software projects are driven by their potential effects on stock prices

                        alcinnz@floss.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
                        alcinnz@floss.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
                        alcinnz@floss.social
                        wrote last edited by
                        #14

                        @baldur I find it interesting that hardware had reached a peak around that time. We had made CPU cores as fast as possible, with nowhere to grow except by adding more cores (or taking on more responsibilities). Which for several reasons the software industry made terrible use of.

                        In large part because we were busy taking advantage of fast, reliable, omnipresent internet!

                        This was also the time GPGPUs & SSDs were entering the market.

                        I think that exacerbated things!

                        1 Reply Last reply
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                        • nielsa@mas.toN nielsa@mas.to

                          @baldur This is the only time I've seen someone clearly articulate the state of the industry. The way I usually frame this is in terms of wasted creative potential in developers being captured by hypercapitalized companies, making them work on uninteresting and unimportant problems, to enable the company to capture shares of some transient market... while many real, interesting problems remain unsolved.

                          nielsa@mas.toN This user is from outside of this forum
                          nielsa@mas.toN This user is from outside of this forum
                          nielsa@mas.to
                          wrote last edited by
                          #15

                          @baldur Meanwhile governments (at least the Danish one) has been pushing to educate more software engineers, at a doubling rate of around 5 years.

                          But there is so much untapped potential in the industry already, from lackluster training of new developers (from too few real masters of the craft and lack of interest from companies) and poorly directed effort...

                          Anyway, glad to see you talk about it.

                          1 Reply Last reply
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                          • baldur@toot.cafeB baldur@toot.cafe

                            There is nothing either group can say to the other to shift them because the disagreement is down to a fundamental difference in world view

                            But if you aren't in tech and are wondering which to trust, just ask yourself: do you really think the chucklefucks of tech, the clowns who have been running the show over the past couple of decades, have got coding completely figured out?

                            /end

                            aedius@lavraievie.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
                            aedius@lavraievie.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
                            aedius@lavraievie.social
                            wrote last edited by
                            #16

                            @baldur

                            /sarcasm on

                            Who knew people embracing LLM for code are the same that move fast and break thing.

                            The people that din't want to work on a page usefull once a year and just remove it along with the tests instead of fixing it.

                            The same people that updated some dependencies and just put them in production to see if it worked.

                            /sarcasm off

                            I have the same conclusion, it the whole industry that must change, and not just go back from using llm.

                            1 Reply Last reply
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                            • baldur@toot.cafeB baldur@toot.cafe

                              LLMs exaggerate and exacerbate existing market and industry dysfunctions. They've hastened media's descent into fabrications and clickbait, accelerated the devaluation of writing and illustration. And in software it has fuelled an existing crisis and exposed a divide at the core of the industry

                              cap_ybarra@beige.partyC This user is from outside of this forum
                              cap_ybarra@beige.partyC This user is from outside of this forum
                              cap_ybarra@beige.party
                              wrote last edited by
                              #17

                              @baldur Some of the clearest thinking on the chain of causality for why we are where we are. Phenomenal.

                              baldur@toot.cafeB 1 Reply Last reply
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                              • baldur@toot.cafeB baldur@toot.cafe

                                There is nothing either group can say to the other to shift them because the disagreement is down to a fundamental difference in world view

                                But if you aren't in tech and are wondering which to trust, just ask yourself: do you really think the chucklefucks of tech, the clowns who have been running the show over the past couple of decades, have got coding completely figured out?

                                /end

                                neilk@xoxo.zoneN This user is from outside of this forum
                                neilk@xoxo.zoneN This user is from outside of this forum
                                neilk@xoxo.zone
                                wrote last edited by
                                #18

                                @baldur There is a really large group of people who think LLMs are interesting tools with new advantages and new risks. Like maybe 80% of the developers I know or work with. And they can be swayed by arguments that it is too risky or the productivity boosts are short-lived or aren’t there.

                                There is a solid 20% who are expecting Armageddon and picking a side (pro or con). Maybe these are the people who can say nothing to each other?

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • baldur@toot.cafeB baldur@toot.cafe

                                  There is nothing either group can say to the other to shift them because the disagreement is down to a fundamental difference in world view

                                  But if you aren't in tech and are wondering which to trust, just ask yourself: do you really think the chucklefucks of tech, the clowns who have been running the show over the past couple of decades, have got coding completely figured out?

                                  /end

                                  cap_ybarra@beige.partyC This user is from outside of this forum
                                  cap_ybarra@beige.partyC This user is from outside of this forum
                                  cap_ybarra@beige.party
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #19

                                  @baldur unfortunate realization:

                                  team "quality matters" has all the talent, but team "race to the bottom" has all the money

                                  baldur@toot.cafeB 1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • R relay@relay.infosec.exchange shared this topic
                                  • baldur@toot.cafeB baldur@toot.cafe

                                    There is nothing either group can say to the other to shift them because the disagreement is down to a fundamental difference in world view

                                    But if you aren't in tech and are wondering which to trust, just ask yourself: do you really think the chucklefucks of tech, the clowns who have been running the show over the past couple of decades, have got coding completely figured out?

                                    /end

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

                                    @baldur I don’t think there has been solid code quality outside of very niche industries since the 80s. And I wasn’t alive for most of that.

                                    I don’t take joy in the plight of the industry but I also think it was enabled for far too long even at the IC level.

                                    The small percentage here won’t shift the tide and the mass who don’t care may in fact get slight quality improvements if tooling evolves.

                                    I’ve seen deterministically ‘safe’ code gen. But it was never productized.

                                    baldur@toot.cafeB 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • baldur@toot.cafeB baldur@toot.cafe

                                      Our current software crisis—we've had a few—has been ramping up IMO since the post-2007 bailouts. Instead of regulating finance, the US let the finance industry take over, which hasn't been great overall, but for software it's meant that "quality" stopped mattering

                                      Well-funded startups capture market share with subsidised products.

                                      Big tech is a cluster of oligopolies and monopolies.

                                      Internal software projects are driven by their potential effects on stock prices

                                      D This user is from outside of this forum
                                      D This user is from outside of this forum
                                      darkerknight@climatejustice.social
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #21

                                      @baldur

                                      Its a run away game that leads only downwards.

                                      The answer to this peril is to stop playing the game!

                                      Note the difficulties with addictions and cold turkey times.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • dotsie@mastodon.socialD dotsie@mastodon.social

                                        @baldur I don’t think there has been solid code quality outside of very niche industries since the 80s. And I wasn’t alive for most of that.

                                        I don’t take joy in the plight of the industry but I also think it was enabled for far too long even at the IC level.

                                        The small percentage here won’t shift the tide and the mass who don’t care may in fact get slight quality improvements if tooling evolves.

                                        I’ve seen deterministically ‘safe’ code gen. But it was never productized.

                                        baldur@toot.cafeB This user is from outside of this forum
                                        baldur@toot.cafeB This user is from outside of this forum
                                        baldur@toot.cafe
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #22

                                        @dotsie Yeah, I can believe that. I can only speak of the decline that's been visible over my career, but I know many others have pointed out that the flaws seem fundamental to the industry.

                                        dmitry@mastodon.circle.ltD 1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • cap_ybarra@beige.partyC cap_ybarra@beige.party

                                          @baldur unfortunate realization:

                                          team "quality matters" has all the talent, but team "race to the bottom" has all the money

                                          baldur@toot.cafeB This user is from outside of this forum
                                          baldur@toot.cafeB This user is from outside of this forum
                                          baldur@toot.cafe
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #23

                                          @cap_ybarra Too true.

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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