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aftergibson

862 karmajoined 6 ปีที่แล้ว

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UK Expands Online Safety Act to Mandate Preemptive Scanning

reclaimthenet.org
68 points·by aftergibson·6 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·117 comments

comments

aftergibson
·16 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา·discuss
Okay, yup, this line of reasoning has me removing agents from my personal machines. I was enjoying the convenience and waved that internal niggle away with a vague feeling of "they would never exploit this", but you're right, I needed that wake up call.
aftergibson
·17 วันที่ผ่านมา·discuss
I have a mudita kompact as my primary phone, is there any value in getting an additional device like this?
aftergibson
·17 วันที่ผ่านมา·discuss
I would love if a device like this, combined with the zines of old would produce some really creative and interesting shortform content to get folks off smartphones.

I'm trying to think in terms of small wins more and 1 minute spent creating something dumb or doing something not on a phone is 1 less minute creepy, greedy tech bros can extract your data for profit.
aftergibson
·18 วันที่ผ่านมา·discuss
https://pi.dev/models is throwing an internal server error for me.
aftergibson
·2 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
If your up for waiting and the usual crowd funding risks there's https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/zerowriter/zerowriter-f...

I backed it myself.
aftergibson
·3 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
[dead]
aftergibson
·3 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
Looks nice, I'm forced to use OSX at work, but it's a hard no for another subscription.
aftergibson
·4 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
Yeah that would by my ranking too. At work is Google because it's the best, particularly for collabotation, personally all in on FOSS.
aftergibson
·4 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
Nothing screams being infantilised by your platform more than having to wait 24 hours to be allowed to install software on your own purchased computing devices.
aftergibson
·5 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
No judgement whatsoever, but for almost everyone they too will think, no big deal you only install software through stores right? Nothing changes for them, in fact they can't conceive of an alternative anymore.
aftergibson
·5 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
Archive.org shows this went live last September: https://web.archive.org/web/20250108142456/https://learn.mic...

It took ~5 months for anyone to notice and fix something that is obviously wrong at a glance.

How many people saw that page, skimmed it, and thought “good enough”? That feels like a pretty honest reflection of the state of knowledge work right now. Everyone is running at a velocity where quality, craft and care are optional luxuries. Authors don’t have time to write properly, reviewers don’t have time to review properly, and readers don’t have time to read properly.

So we end up shipping documentation that nobody really reads and nobody really owns. The process says “published”, so it’s done.

AI didn’t create this, it just dramatically lowers the cost of producing text and images that look plausible enough to pass a quick skim. If anything it makes the underlying problem worse: more content, less attention, less understanding.

It was already possible to cargo-cult GitFlow by copying the diagram without reading the context. Now we’re cargo-culting diagrams that were generated without understanding in the first place.

If the reality is that we’re too busy to write, review, or read properly, what is the actual function of this documentation beyond being checkbox output?
aftergibson
·5 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
You should be unbelievably proud of what you've achieved, and it's lovely to be reminded of the amazing things people can accomplish amongst the backdrop of almost deafeningly negative sentiment going around.

Thanks for doing what you do and for sharing your story!
aftergibson
·5 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
Yeah, I’m not disputing that AI-assisted engineering is a real shift. It obviously is.

My issue is that we’ve now got a million secondary “paradigm shifts” layered on top: agent frameworks, orchestration patterns, prompt DSLs, eval harnesses, routing, memory, tool calling, “autonomous” workflows… all presented like you’re behind if you’re not constantly replatforming your brain.

Even if the end-state is “engineers code less”, the near-term reality for most engineers is still: deliver software, support customers, handle incidents, and now also become competent evaluators of rapidly changing bot stacks. That cognitive tax is brutal.

So yes, follow where the ball is going. I am. I’m just not pretending the current proliferation is anything other than noisy and expensive to keep up with.
aftergibson
·5 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
Probably, but which ones, do we get to a place where you have X years experience in Gastown development, but I only have Y years experience in Entire.

I also keep getting job applications for AI-native 'developers' whatever that means.
aftergibson
·5 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
Christ, a $60m seed round.

The AI fatigue is real, and the cooling-off period is going to hurt. We’re deep into concept overload now. Every week it’s another tool (don’t get me started on Gas Town) confidently claiming to solve… something. “Faster development”, apparently.

Unless you’re already ideologically committed to this space, I don’t see how the average engineer has the energy or motivation to even understand these tools, never mind meaningfully compare them. That’s before you factor in that many of them actively remove the parts of engineering people enjoy, while piling on yet another layer of abstraction, configuration, and cognitive load.

I’m so tired of being told we’re in yet another “paradigm shift”. Tools like Codex can be useful in small doses, but the moment it turns into a sprawling ecosystem of prompts, agents, workflows, and magical thinking, it stops feeling like leverage and starts feeling like self-inflicted complexity.
aftergibson
·5 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
Highly relevant username!
aftergibson
·5 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
This is a very good point. Years ago working in a LAMP stack, the term LAMP could fully describe your software engineering, database setup and infrastructure. I shudder to think of the acronyms for today's tech stacks.
aftergibson
·9 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
Looks like the status page is overloaded...
aftergibson
·9 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
Not from the prices I'm seeing.
aftergibson
·9 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
As time goes on, I find myself increasingly worried about supply chain attacks—not from a “this could cost me my job” or “NixOS, CI/CD, Node, etc. are introducing new attack vectors” perspective, but from a more philosophical one.

The more I rely on, the more problems I’ll inevitably have to deal with.

I’m not thinking about anything particularly complex—just using things like VSCode, Emacs, Nix, Vim, Firefox, JavaScript, Node, and their endless plugins and dependencies already feels like a tangled mess.

Embarrassingly, this has been pushing me toward using paper and the simplest, dumbest tech possible—no extensions, no plugins—just to feel some sense of control or security. I know it’s not entirely rational, but I can’t shake this growing disillusionment with modern technology. There’s only so much complexity I can tolerate anymore.