Am I the only person who PANICs whenever I accidentally somehow activate the AI on my android? I'm so conditioned to panic whenever I see that floating rainbow that the whole marketing page is covered in I get very negative feelings.
After how many years of "shifting left" and understanding the importance of having security involved in the dev and planning process, now the recommendation is to vibe code with human intuition, review then spend a million tokens to "harden"?
I understand that isn't the point of the article and the article does make sense in its other parts. But that last paragraph leaves me scratching my head wondering if the author understands infosec at all?
what it could be really cool for is stuff like "open my house door", "Turn off the lights", "text so and so", "Start my car"
Stuff we want to do without pulling out our phone that doesn't require a lot of detailed instruction.
This is literally only as fast as text to speech. the only difference is that you don't have to speak aloud. Which is cool.
But for using a computer its still annoying and worse than a mouse because with a mouse you can click or drag and place in a second, in this format you have to think "move the box from point A to point B (with coordinates or a description) etc etc".
I think its cool, I've been brainstorming how a good MCI would work for a while and didn't think of this. I think its a great novel approach that will probably be expanded on soon.