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> My observation is that in both cases people were mostly wrong and required strict reviews and verification, with the exception of those who did Great Work.

Sure, but LLMs allow people to be wronger faster now, so they could conceivably inundate the reviewer with a new set of changes requiring a new two hour review, by only pressing buttons for two minutes.

> If you find yourself becoming irrationally upset by something that you're encountering that's largely outside of your control, consider going to therapy and not forming a borderline obsession with purity on something that has always been a bit slippery (creative originality ).

Maybe your take on it is slightly different because your job function is somewhat different?

I assume that many people complaining here about the LLM slop are more worried about functional correctness than creative originality.



If it's important to the argument, my title is "Principal Software Engineer MTS". I review code, ADRs, meeting summaries, design docs, PRDs etc...

> I assume that many people complaining here about the LLM slop are more worried about functional correctness than creative originality.

My point is, I've been in the game for coming up on 16 years, mostly in large corporate FAANG-adjacent environments. People have always been functionally incorrect and not to be trusted. It used to be a meme said with endearment, "don't trust my code, I'm a bug machine!" Zero trust. That's why we do code reviews.

> Sure, but LLMs allow people to be wronger faster now, so they could conceivably inundate the reviewer...

With respect, "conceivably" is doing a lot of work here. I don't see it happening. I see more slop code, sure. But that doesn't mean I _have_ to review it with the same scrutiny.

My experience thus far has been that this is solved quite simply: After a quick scan, "Please give this more thought before resubmitting. Consider reviewing yourself, take a pass at refining and verify functionality."

> Maybe your take on it is slightly different because your job function is somewhat different? > I assume that many people complaining here about the LLM slop are more worried about functional correctness than creative originality.

Interestingly, I see the opposite in the online space. First of all, as an aside, I don't see many people complaining at all in real life (other than the common commiseration of getting slop PRs, which has replaced the common commiseration of getting normal PRs of sub-par quality).

I primarily see people coming to the defense of human creativity and becoming incensed by reading (or I should say, "viewing" more generally) something that an llm has touched.

It appears that mostly people have accepted that llms are a useful tool for producing code and that when used unethically (first pass llm -> production), of course they're no good.

There is a moral outrage and indigence that I've observed however (on HN, and elsewhere) when an LLM has been used for the creative arts.




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