Anthropic is probably on the leading edge of vibe coding, and in the past month, they’ve had major server uptime issues, they accidentally released the source code for their biggest product, and as of this week, their latest model was accidentally posted on an open URL for anyone to download. In the last 6 months, people have actually switched from vibe coding small apps to vibe coding major sections of their core infrastructure, and all evidence so far suggests that the consequences will come.
I’m vibe coding a fairly complicated bash script to fully automate upgrading a web server at work. For context, I have over 2 decades experience in programming/data analytics/tech, but I’m a Linux and server admin newbie.
It’s comically bad at it. Like, I had to tell it not to post passwords to the production database to console and plaintext log files. Then, about a dozen prompts later, it does it again. The restore script rm-ed things (as sudo) before checking that it had a valid backup file to replace it with. It keeps deleting the comments in the code snippets I send it to update/fix, even when explicitly told to keep the comments. I asked it to prepend time to live commands (i.e. not “dry run” echos), and then it deleted them all again when I asked it to refactor something unrelated.
It’s been great learning for me, and I’m definitely getting this job done faster and to a higher quality than I could on my own, but holy hell these scripts would have been a disaster if someone just ran them “as is”. I’ve needed to fix dozens of errors that could have really screwed things up.
I wonder how often people go through their vibe coded outputs with the careful attention and care it needs. I’m guessing infrequently. LLMs are just word prediction machines; they don’t understand anything.
I saw this one person who, despite getting 3 warnings (one in the chat, 2 in the file itself) about not placing a plaintext API key into a version-controlled env file from a chatbot, did so anyway. Its not just about the AI, but also about the people using them. Someone with experience will be able to utilize the speed of an AI, while finding its mistakes as well. A “vibe coder” won’t know the difference.
Is that a good metric??
Isn’t this just stating that you’re letting something with the coding ability of a toddler run amok through your product, having to constantly be bug-fixed by your remaining engineers?
This is exactly what Microsoft started doing, and its so far worked out terribly for them. Loads of their new software updates have had unacceptablely large bugs for even simple things like task manager!
Most of my code is ai generated - but I have to carefully review everything because it ofte makes poor decisions.
Does that include breaking promises to users and promising everlasting servitude to president orange blob inmate #P01135809?
Sign the petition: https://keepandroidopen.org/
Of course! Google would say that. Doesn’t mean it’s true. They aren’t under oath and they have every reason to lie.
internet is going to collapse under rampant cybercrime at some point, all the slopcode will have everything so broken and vulnerable hackers will have choiceparalyze.
Onky 75%? I thought they were “all in” on the AI future.
Fucking amatures.
Oh I’m sure this will end well. /s
This is such a stupid metric and any investors excited by it should feel bad.

And that’s only 30% lol
“Yes, but have you shipped anything positive?”
Man Gemini sucks. They force replaced assistant with Gemini for me.
“Hey google, play my rock playlist”
“You dont have a rock Playlist on youtube music”
“Hey google play rock Playlist on spotify”
“You dont have “rock Playlist on Spotify” on youtube music”
We call this fucking progress?
I know its barely related to the post. Just fuck Google and fuck their ai
We can tell
Ah, so that’s why things are so fucked.
I have a friend at Google who been saying “sorry p0 bug” so much in the last month…
Are they using ai to fix them?
I still remember the good old days when google has the best code quality among big techs. That being said, seeing how shitty everyone’s code has become, google might still be the best :)
Yeah, we can tell…









