LLMs exaggerate and exacerbate existing market and industry dysfunctions.
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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
@baldur Some of the clearest thinking on the chain of causality for why we are where we are. Phenomenal.
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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
@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?
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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
@baldur unfortunate realization:
team "quality matters" has all the talent, but team "race to the bottom" has all the money
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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
@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.
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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
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.
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@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.
@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.
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@baldur unfortunate realization:
team "quality matters" has all the talent, but team "race to the bottom" has all the money
@cap_ybarra Too true.
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@baldur Some of the clearest thinking on the chain of causality for why we are where we are. Phenomenal.
@cap_ybarra Thanks!
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@baldur please write this up on your site, it’s gold
@mattly Thanks! I plan to. Just need to find the time.

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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
@baldur honestly I see it as a problem of "business management". I mean, look at what they keep investing in and the way they take decisions.
Ofc the system produced shit outcomes.
But automating the whole system with the same kind of bullshit generators that were humans before change nothing to how broken the system is.
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@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.
@baldur @dotsie I'm old enough to have done ISO-9000 training. Through my career, I saw the entire trade of Quality Assurance arise, evolve into Test Automation, get diluted by Test Driven Development, supplanted by Data Scientists leveraging Internet scale experimentation made possible by Big Tech monopolies, and gradually eliminated from product selling point considerations by the time-to-market race to the bottom.
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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
@baldur I really like this characterization of the two groups. I have worked with both of these people at different times in my career.
And I honestly think we're spending too much time listening to both camps. Because not only are they not going to agree with each other, those extremes are not going to "accept defeat" in any way.
The productivity people are going to claim that today's problem will be figured out in 6 months. The quality people will find yet another layer to quibble about that will inevitably end with somebody, somewhere failing to write something down.
I think the reality is going to be somewhere in the middle. And it's going to be more complex than either side is currently characterizing. I think we need to spend more time talking about what success looks like. Because ultimately, that's the decision humans need to be making.
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