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CIRCLE WITH A DOT

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  3. Man, every part of this blog post sucks.

Man, every part of this blog post sucks.

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  • mnl@hachyderm.ioM mnl@hachyderm.io

    @xgranade I read the article as “there are a lot enthusiastic about building software now, the tools are problematic, but we shouldn’t throw the baby out with the bathwater.” Computers and software at large have always been tools of labor displacement and oppression.

    PS: I fully agree on the labor solidarity point. Which is partly why I welcome all the people who find a way to gain some agency over computers, through llms or not.

    xgranade@wandering.shopX This user is from outside of this forum
    xgranade@wandering.shopX This user is from outside of this forum
    xgranade@wandering.shop
    wrote last edited by
    #13

    @mnl "through LLMs or not" is not labor solidarity, it's scabbing.

    mnl@hachyderm.ioM 1 Reply Last reply
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    • xgranade@wandering.shopX xgranade@wandering.shop

      @mnl "through LLMs or not" is not labor solidarity, it's scabbing.

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

      @xgranade ok so if say, a cnc operator comes to me and wants help with the cnc machine search engine they wrote with ChatGPT, what should I do? “Stick to your lane buddy”? I personally told them “that’s amazing, if you ever need some help, feel free me to contact me”, because I want them to be able to search for manuals with their computer without using say, Google Drive.

      xgranade@wandering.shopX 1 Reply Last reply
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      • mnl@hachyderm.ioM mnl@hachyderm.io

        @xgranade ok so if say, a cnc operator comes to me and wants help with the cnc machine search engine they wrote with ChatGPT, what should I do? “Stick to your lane buddy”? I personally told them “that’s amazing, if you ever need some help, feel free me to contact me”, because I want them to be able to search for manuals with their computer without using say, Google Drive.

        xgranade@wandering.shopX This user is from outside of this forum
        xgranade@wandering.shopX This user is from outside of this forum
        xgranade@wandering.shop
        wrote last edited by
        #15

        @mnl Congrats on being a scab. I wouldn't brag about it, but hey.

        mnl@hachyderm.ioM 1 Reply Last reply
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        • xgranade@wandering.shopX xgranade@wandering.shop

          @mnl Congrats on being a scab. I wouldn't brag about it, but hey.

          mnl@hachyderm.ioM This user is from outside of this forum
          mnl@hachyderm.ioM This user is from outside of this forum
          mnl@hachyderm.io
          wrote last edited by
          #16

          @xgranade I’m genuinely curious what you would tell that person… that they’re a scab? Note that I offered help, that’s it… if not offering help is solidarity then I don’t understand what you are getting at.

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          • xgranade@wandering.shopX xgranade@wandering.shop

            Look at what happened with Claude Code. We learned via the source code leak that the whole thing is a Rube Goldberg machine of shoddy regexes and Markdown snippets telling Claude to lie, and yet proverbial moments later, Anthropic announces a new product that *totally works this time I swear* and all of a sudden discourse about AI tools "working" is completely reset.

            Getting stuck in that discourse loop opens you up to being perpetually distracted from the far more important ethical problems.

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

            @xgranade They linted the regexes this time.

            tuban_muzuru@beige.partyT 1 Reply Last reply
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            • xgranade@wandering.shopX xgranade@wandering.shop

              Look at what happened with Claude Code. We learned via the source code leak that the whole thing is a Rube Goldberg machine of shoddy regexes and Markdown snippets telling Claude to lie, and yet proverbial moments later, Anthropic announces a new product that *totally works this time I swear* and all of a sudden discourse about AI tools "working" is completely reset.

              Getting stuck in that discourse loop opens you up to being perpetually distracted from the far more important ethical problems.

              bms48@mastodon.socialB This user is from outside of this forum
              bms48@mastodon.socialB This user is from outside of this forum
              bms48@mastodon.social
              wrote last edited by
              #18

              @xgranade "And now before giving you the details of the battle, I bring you a warning: Every one of you listening to my voice, tell the world, tell this to everybody wherever they are. Watch the skies. Everywhere. Keep looking. Keep watching the skies." -- The Thing from Another World

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              • xgranade@wandering.shopX xgranade@wandering.shop

                Look at what happened with Claude Code. We learned via the source code leak that the whole thing is a Rube Goldberg machine of shoddy regexes and Markdown snippets telling Claude to lie, and yet proverbial moments later, Anthropic announces a new product that *totally works this time I swear* and all of a sudden discourse about AI tools "working" is completely reset.

                Getting stuck in that discourse loop opens you up to being perpetually distracted from the far more important ethical problems.

                bms48@mastodon.socialB This user is from outside of this forum
                bms48@mastodon.socialB This user is from outside of this forum
                bms48@mastodon.social
                wrote last edited by
                #19

                @xgranade The Potemkin Village effect is deleterious to everyone's mental health. When someone has to pretend they don't know a thing, when that thing is wholly morally and ethically wrong, there are tics, tells. Anthropic clearly lied about this and then pulled the "Copyright law for me, but not for thee" crap with the DMCA takedowns after speciously claiming like all the other cloud AI companies they need everyone's data to train on. Checkmate. No credibility, sorry. I was keeping an open mind

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                • xgranade@wandering.shopX xgranade@wandering.shop

                  Man, every part of this blog post sucks.

                  Link Preview Image
                  Eternal November — this new influx of users may be better than the last one

                  The Software Freedom Conservancy provides a non-profit home and services to Free, Libre and Open Source Software (FLOSS) projects.

                  favicon

                  Software Freedom Conservancy (sfconservancy.org)

                  This is what happens to discourse when the focus is on whether AI tools "work," necessarily a complex and shifting topic that gives bad-faith actors lots of room to sow confusion, and not on the ethical catastrophe caused by adopting or allowing AI products into OSS development processes.

                  bms48@mastodon.socialB This user is from outside of this forum
                  bms48@mastodon.socialB This user is from outside of this forum
                  bms48@mastodon.social
                  wrote last edited by
                  #20

                  @xgranade It is really wishy-washy stuff isn't it? Chains of provenance have to be established, like how models were trained, who operates them, how they are hosted. Claude can't cite its own sources when asked to so; externalized counterparty risk. TANSTAAFL.

                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • xgranade@wandering.shopX xgranade@wandering.shop

                    Man, every part of this blog post sucks.

                    Link Preview Image
                    Eternal November — this new influx of users may be better than the last one

                    The Software Freedom Conservancy provides a non-profit home and services to Free, Libre and Open Source Software (FLOSS) projects.

                    favicon

                    Software Freedom Conservancy (sfconservancy.org)

                    This is what happens to discourse when the focus is on whether AI tools "work," necessarily a complex and shifting topic that gives bad-faith actors lots of room to sow confusion, and not on the ethical catastrophe caused by adopting or allowing AI products into OSS development processes.

                    yoasif@mastodon.socialY This user is from outside of this forum
                    yoasif@mastodon.socialY This user is from outside of this forum
                    yoasif@mastodon.social
                    wrote last edited by
                    #21

                    @xgranade I love how this says nothing about the fact that letting LLM code into copyleft codebases makes value leak out of the project: https://www.quippd.com/writing/2026/04/08/ai-code-is-hollowing-out-open-source-and-maintainers-are-looking-the-other-way.html

                    We're just supposed to say "it works, don't it?" and look the other way while contributors get robbed.

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                    • xgranade@wandering.shopX xgranade@wandering.shop

                      @pathunstrom Yes, this. I would also argue that slop is far worse than spam, if only from a pure ethical perspective. Put bluntly, spam isn't inherently fascist tech, but slop is, and I wish that blog post even *mentioned* the ethical problems with letting fascist tech into OSS.

                      bstacey@icosahedron.websiteB This user is from outside of this forum
                      bstacey@icosahedron.websiteB This user is from outside of this forum
                      bstacey@icosahedron.website
                      wrote last edited by
                      #22

                      @xgranade @pathunstrom Spam, the meat product:

                      1. Full of fat, cholesterol, salt and sodium nitrite
                      2. Made in a factory that has indulged in union-busting, exploited immigrant labor, and given people autoimmune diseases from inhaling aerosolized pig brains (https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2011/06/hormel-spam-pig-brains-disease/)
                      3. Foisted on the people because of racism (Spam dominated the Hawaiian diet in WWII because the US barred people of Japanese descent from fishing)

                      Maybe the canned meat product is an even better analogy than the unwanted email....

                      1 Reply Last reply
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                      • pathunstrom@ngmx.comP pathunstrom@ngmx.com

                        @xgranade oh, you know I agree there! It's just easier to convince boosters that spam is bad than llms are bad, and thus easier to wedge into "so if thing primarily produces spam, and spam bad, we should be heavily skeptical of thing."

                        xgranade@wandering.shopX This user is from outside of this forum
                        xgranade@wandering.shopX This user is from outside of this forum
                        xgranade@wandering.shop
                        wrote last edited by
                        #23

                        @pathunstrom No, of course, sorry for preaching to the choir. I'm just still mad at the original blog post for acting like the problems with AI are at worst the problems caused by spam.

                        But I absolutely take your point and agree.

                        1 Reply Last reply
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                        • xgranade@wandering.shopX xgranade@wandering.shop

                          Look at what happened with Claude Code. We learned via the source code leak that the whole thing is a Rube Goldberg machine of shoddy regexes and Markdown snippets telling Claude to lie, and yet proverbial moments later, Anthropic announces a new product that *totally works this time I swear* and all of a sudden discourse about AI tools "working" is completely reset.

                          Getting stuck in that discourse loop opens you up to being perpetually distracted from the far more important ethical problems.

                          viss@mastodon.socialV This user is from outside of this forum
                          viss@mastodon.socialV This user is from outside of this forum
                          viss@mastodon.social
                          wrote last edited by
                          #24

                          @xgranade this is like when equifax got hacked for not doing security basics, then got away with lying to congress about it, then offered "free credit monitoring" to the affected people. if equifax can get away with it like that, and then later facebook with the whole cambridge analytica deal, anthropic has an idea-style howto manual on how to do it next

                          1 Reply Last reply
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                          • jmax@mastodon.socialJ jmax@mastodon.social

                            @xgranade They linted the regexes this time.

                            tuban_muzuru@beige.partyT This user is from outside of this forum
                            tuban_muzuru@beige.partyT This user is from outside of this forum
                            tuban_muzuru@beige.party
                            wrote last edited by
                            #25

                            @jmax @xgranade

                            ... and yet, despite the fraudsters and the preposterous claims, there is honest research going on.

                            Context engines in browser searches are chugging along, ethically sound, using Transformer technology. Nothing magic to it, just using context going backwards and forwards.

                            1 Reply Last reply
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                            • owen@mastodon.transneptune.netO owen@mastodon.transneptune.net

                              @xgranade This is the pettiest of complaints but _right off the bat_ the author gets their folk history badly wrong.

                              I have a lot of complaints about the Eternal September framing in general, but forgetting that it was Eternal because it was the _general public_ getting access (through AOL, principally) and only September because it reminded old-timers of the annual new student rush, is appalling.

                              Grr argh.

                              flippac@types.plF This user is from outside of this forum
                              flippac@types.plF This user is from outside of this forum
                              flippac@types.pl
                              wrote last edited by
                              #26

                              @owen @xgranade Also because AOL's own services worked differently etc etc - so their own user base were active participants in a different culture being dropped in a separate one they didn't understand as such

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