@SomeVeganCheeseIsOk
When someone is expressing that they've been wronged and harmed, it is not okay to respond with celebration that it is so.
Walking down the street isn't any less real because you weren't stabbed.
@vkc
@SomeVeganCheeseIsOk
When someone is expressing that they've been wronged and harmed, it is not okay to respond with celebration that it is so.
Walking down the street isn't any less real because you weren't stabbed.
@vkc
@shadowwwind
Managed instances aren't enough. They have the benefit of pre-blocking the awful servers, but the truly vile will open burner accounts on "too big to block" instances to harass their targets.
We need software with better safety features.
The other way you can go, ofc, is blocking the big instances, but that's not helpful for anyone trying for any sort of reach.
@vkc
@suriele
This tool is noteworthy because it can produce bad code orders of magnitude faster than a human. It's faster even than doing a web search and hitting Stack Overflow.
It's also good at naming variables and adding comments that, at first glance, can look like what you want. So it takes longer to review.
It has also democratized things, such that anyone that can track down a bug report can now slam keywords into a chatbot and get code that purports to fix the issue, even if they don't know the language (or, indeed, how to program at all).
It's noble to try to avoid blaming tools, but this is drastically different than most others, if it can be called a tool at all. Last I heard, companies making heavy use of it aren't seeing any productivity gain.
LLMs have drastically increased the cost of doing open source, at questionable-if-any benefit.
@Purple