The best writing on this is the "agent principal-agent" problem, which correctly frames the problem of agents and code review in terms of trust.
This is why the solutions for high-trust environments (small teams) and low-trust environments (big companies, open source projects) will be different.
This is wonderful. Consider decoupling the core from Emacs, or packaging in a way that doesn’t require it as heavily.
I’ve been doing my own exploration of terminal ASCII games via Dwarf Fortress instead of SimCity. I’ve learned that letting a coding agent play is an interesting way to get feedback as well :)
This is @simonw’s Lethal Trifecta [1] again - access to private data and untrusted input are arguably the purpose of enterprise agents, so any external communication is unsafe. Markdown images are just the ones people usually forget about
I have a soft spot for these JS fuzzy matchers, but there are so many that it’s worth talking about about the specific tradeoffs you chose / ideally offering an interactive comparison like μFuzzy does:
This is why the solutions for high-trust environments (small teams) and low-trust environments (big companies, open source projects) will be different.
https://crawshaw.io/blog/agent-principal-agent