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submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

spoilerContext: The decline started way before AI.

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[-] [email protected] 0 points 1 month ago

My "credibility on this topic" is of zero interest to me. I am not here to appeal to authority. I know you didn't mean it like that, but man, it's such a social media argument point to make it jumped right at me. For the record, it's not that I haven't heard about problems with training on AI-generated content (and on filtering out that content). It's that I don't need to flaunt my e-dick and will openly admit when I haven't gone deep into an issue. I have not read the papers I've heard of and I have not specifically searched for more of them, so I'll get back to you on that one if and when I do.

Anyway, that aside, you are presenting a bizarre scenario. You're arguing that corporations will be demonstrably worse off by moving all coding to be machine-generated but they will do it anyway. Ad infinitum. Until there are no human coders left. At which point they will somehow keep doing it despite the fact that AI training would have entirely unraveled as a process by then.

Think you may have extrapolated a bit too far on that one? I think you may have extrapolated a bit too far on that one. Corpos can do a lot of dumb shit, but they tend to be very sensitive about stuff that costs them money. And even if that wasn't the case, the insane volume of cheap skilled labor that would generate pretty much guarantees some competing upstart would replace them with the, in your sci-fi scenario, massively superior alternative.

FWIW, no, that's not the same as outsourcing. Outsourcing hasn't "often been a bad idea". Having been on both sides of that conversation, it's "a bad idea" when you have a home base with no incentive to help their outsourced peers and a superiority complex. There's nothing inherently worse about an outsourced worker/developer. The thing that closes the gap on outsourcing cost/performance is, if anything, that over time outsourced workers get good and expect to get paid to match. I am pretty much okay with every part of that loop. Different pet peeve, though, we may want to avoid that rabbit hole.

this post was submitted on 18 May 2025
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