Or, get this, people don't care. We aren't computers. Some of us, at least
Bazoogle
I think it’s just more the act of discovering what we can do with AI. It’s like openclaw, that could’ve been around last year, it’s not like AI wasn’t capable enough at that point, it’s just that no-one thought of using it like that
What would you call developement/improvement if not exactly this? Some of histories biggest advancements are finding better ways to utilize things we already have
How do you know those were the result of the AI?
I quite deliberately tried to err on the side of fixing security issues for that release, and there were some valid (but unusual) use cases that got caught up in the changes.
Seems to me like it was just his own fault. AI may very well have had nothing to do with the regressions, other than maybe not identifying them?
Seems like he’s been pushed into using LLMs as a way to cope with the deluge of LLM-generated security reports
It's not just LLM generated security reports, but vulnerabilities discovered by AI. Your wording implies they were just reports, and of less validity. Lazy LLM reports are not what he is trying to cope with, since there is nothing to do but close those reports. He is talking about real, verified, vulnerabilities that weren't discovered until AI tools. Not because humans couldn't find them, but none ever did. When it comes to finding, it really doesn't matter if it's found by human or AI, since that doesn't change its existence or severity.
He did have a disclaimer. It says it was co-authored by claude
What you see in the commit history with co-authored by claude is the tip of the proverbial software engineering iceberg.
The point is that AI is developing at an insane rate. They don't specify, because you would always have to be naming new things every other week, by the very nature of the statement. Things AI was not able to do a month ago, it may be able to do incredibly well now.
If you want an example, AI in security vulnerabilities has made quite a breakthrough recently. Not just Mythos, but multiple AI's are finding 15+ year old vulnerabilities in open source packages basically the entire world relies on. It couldn't do that a few months ago.
Instead of blaming an unrelated country, maybe do a google search? https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2026-06-01/valve-s-antitrust-reckoning-over-steam-has-echoes-of-apple-google-app-store-sui
There were new transcripts from the deposition released.
404 jokes are overused. Get more creative with your HTTP response code jokes
I would have exhaled slightly harder. Maybe. But I would make some quip in response
I don't mind being corrected, but calling an honest mistake a shitty thing to do makes me just want to get defensive and not be receptive to what you're actually saying.
So you're saying you should poke a hole in the line?
They're a greek philosopher from 400BC? Most of them don't seem to be introspective to me