You could’ve said the exact same thing about the internet in the early 2000s when the bubble was at its peak and you had a bunch of companies trying to make products that made no sense. But when the hype died down, and the bubble popped, we got a lot of very useful tech out of it. The situation with LLMs is exactly the same.
While LLMs are stochastic in nature, that doesn’t in any way make them useless. There are plenty of scenarios where they work extremely well. For example, just last week, I wanted to figure out how to decode RAW files from my camera. I have a Nikon, and it uses NEF format which is proprietary and has no open source decoder right now. I threw an LLM at decompiling a binary and tracing it in memory as it was doing the decoding. After a few days, the LLM managed to write the code that decodes the images. This is absolutely not something I would’ve been able to do on my own. And the fact that there aren’t any open source drivers yet, shows that it’s a very difficult task to accomplish. That’s just one real world example.


oh is this whataboutism I keep hearing about?


Yeah, but they’re subhuman orcs, so who cares right.


A few games I really enjoyed Planet of Lana which just had a new instalment, Tunic, Selaco, Arco, Spritfall, Bionic Ban, Prodeus, Neva, Children of the Sun, and Children of Morta.
I’m not pretending to be above it.
Yeah that’s definitely my impression as well. Fediverse as a whole has become a place where people love to come to rant about LLMs now.
People who add vapid noise to threads because of their personal pet peeve suck way more ass than AI ever could.


The exploit affects repository owners if they merge the malicious commit, their CI/CD pipeline gets infected, and their cloud credentials, SSH keys,GitHub tokens, and etc., are stolen. Anyone working on compromised repositories or using CI/CD variables could have their credentials exfiltrated. If you are not a repository owner or contributor to affected repos then your direct risk is likely low. The article lists 5,561 infected repositories, so if you don’t contribute to or use any of those repos (the full list was published by SafeDep), you’re fine.


Nothing wholesome I would wager.
Ironically, I see far more visual pollution from people whinging about AI slop than actual AI slop at this point. People will incessantly complain about AI everywhere, derailing conversations and adding noise. If somebody spots an em dash somewhere then a whole thread turns into a discussion of whether something written by an LLM or not, and whether it’s acceptable for humans to use em dashes. It’s frankly exhausting.


there were a lot of laundry fires of late


I use these tools extensively, and they absolutely do not replace the need for a coder. The reality is that they’re fundamentally incapable of telling whether something is correct or not in the business sense. And Simply churning out a ton of wrong code really fast doesn’t actually help anybody.
They certainly can be a help for a developer. For example, I can fluently write code in any language now even if I’m not familiar with the stack or syntax. A skill that would’ve taken months of effort to build previously. But in terms of actual workflow, it’s not all that much faster because I still have to review what the tool is doing, and human comprehension is still the bottleneck in the whole process.


back before the days of hard drives being a standard thing :)


love to see it
My understanding is that it’s just too good at killing people. The virus needs to have a long incubation period where the person is infectious, but doesn’t show symptoms to really get going.