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  3. If you replace a junior with #LLM and make the senior review output, the reviewer is now scanning for rare but catastrophic errors scattered across a much larger output surface due to LLM "productivity."

If you replace a junior with #LLM and make the senior review output, the reviewer is now scanning for rare but catastrophic errors scattered across a much larger output surface due to LLM "productivity."

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  • RishavX Rishav

    @pseudonym is the problem the increased volume of code that the LLM is producing (as compared to the junior dev) — what you are calling “productivity gains"? because I can see this same argument being made for code produced by humans as well.

    midnightnettleM This user is from outside of this forum
    midnightnettleM This user is from outside of this forum
    midnightnettle
    wrote last edited by
    #14

    @xrisk @mehluv might be able to provide more insight on this, but at least when I was writing content and AI was getting integrated into our work, the expectation was to review high volume of written content much faster for our editors. And we fully made many fuck ups due to that, because it is overwhelming. I assume this might also be the case, but I might be fully wrong. It is not just that the amount of code written is high volume, but also the expected pace of reviewing also is accelerated. Because what is the point of automating stuff if the reviewing process neutralizes the gains?

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    • RishavX Rishav

      @pseudonym is the problem the increased volume of code that the LLM is producing (as compared to the junior dev) — what you are calling “productivity gains"? because I can see this same argument being made for code produced by humans as well.

      Malstrøm :damnified:🧉M This user is from outside of this forum
      Malstrøm :damnified:🧉M This user is from outside of this forum
      Malstrøm :damnified:🧉
      wrote last edited by
      #15

      @xrisk @pseudonym Volume is a key factor here. But even if the volume was the same, LLMs are doomed to stagnate as devs—whose code was scraped for training data—are displaced.

      RishavX 1 Reply Last reply
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      • Pseudo NymP Pseudo Nym

        If you replace a junior with #LLM and make the senior review output, the reviewer is now scanning for rare but catastrophic errors scattered across a much larger output surface due to LLM "productivity."

        That's a cognitively brutal task.

        Humans are terrible at sustained vigilance for rare events in high-volume streams. Aviation, nuclear, radiology all have extensive literature on exactly this failure mode.

        I propose any productivity gains will be consumed by false negative review failures.

        adaA This user is from outside of this forum
        adaA This user is from outside of this forum
        ada
        wrote last edited by
        #16

        @pseudonym That is why they don't replace juniors in aviation, nuclear, and radiology - only in non-critical industry.

        If the cost of potential failure times the estimated failing rate is smaller than the total labour cost of screening, interviewing, training juniors, plus firing cultural misfits - then business replaces it.

        Not only it saves HR operating cost and internal training cost - they can also hang a mistake on a senior reviewer.

        And the review model has a positive productivity projectile as they have a stable improvement curve, unlike human.

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        • Malstrøm :damnified:🧉M Malstrøm :damnified:🧉

          @xrisk @pseudonym Volume is a key factor here. But even if the volume was the same, LLMs are doomed to stagnate as devs—whose code was scraped for training data—are displaced.

          RishavX This user is from outside of this forum
          RishavX This user is from outside of this forum
          Rishav
          wrote last edited by
          #17

          @malstrom @pseudonym that’s an interesting claim. I don’t know enough about LLM research to make a judgement. I do know that LLMs trained on synthetic (other LLM-generated) data tend to perform worse, but have we reached the limits of what LLMs are capable of? In my limited understanding, if an LLM can “learn” fundamental programming “concepts” (the same way they can “learn” concepts across human languages — I could be wrong in my understanding here), they should (might?) be able to transfer/apply those concepts to not-before-seen domains (maybe with a bit of “reasoning” prodded in).

          Krzysztof SakrejdaW 1 Reply Last reply
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          • Pseudo NymP Pseudo Nym

            If you replace a junior with #LLM and make the senior review output, the reviewer is now scanning for rare but catastrophic errors scattered across a much larger output surface due to LLM "productivity."

            That's a cognitively brutal task.

            Humans are terrible at sustained vigilance for rare events in high-volume streams. Aviation, nuclear, radiology all have extensive literature on exactly this failure mode.

            I propose any productivity gains will be consumed by false negative review failures.

            MoutmoutM This user is from outside of this forum
            MoutmoutM This user is from outside of this forum
            Moutmout
            wrote last edited by
            #18

            @pseudonym This.

            I do a lot of "computer science labs", where students learn to write code, and they wave me down when they have questions. When their code doesn't do what they expect, it's often easy to figure out what went wrong because you can spot a bit of code that looks funky. And usually, the problem is in those few lines.

            LLM code is meant to look like good code, so you don't get these little shortcuts.

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            • Pseudo NymP Pseudo Nym

              If you replace a junior with #LLM and make the senior review output, the reviewer is now scanning for rare but catastrophic errors scattered across a much larger output surface due to LLM "productivity."

              That's a cognitively brutal task.

              Humans are terrible at sustained vigilance for rare events in high-volume streams. Aviation, nuclear, radiology all have extensive literature on exactly this failure mode.

              I propose any productivity gains will be consumed by false negative review failures.

              toldtheworldT This user is from outside of this forum
              toldtheworldT This user is from outside of this forum
              toldtheworld
              wrote last edited by
              #19

              @pseudonym I have posed this conundrum before and the answer I received is that there is also an opportunity cost to not moving faster and the risk of a catastrophic bug may not outweigh the risk of being overtaken by competitors, especially since that was already happening before LLMs anyway.

              Also, it *seems* models are improving at detecting these bugs, so they are being used to review changes, which, for the reasons you point out, they might be better at than people.

              RobotistryR 1 Reply Last reply
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              • RishavX Rishav

                @malstrom @pseudonym that’s an interesting claim. I don’t know enough about LLM research to make a judgement. I do know that LLMs trained on synthetic (other LLM-generated) data tend to perform worse, but have we reached the limits of what LLMs are capable of? In my limited understanding, if an LLM can “learn” fundamental programming “concepts” (the same way they can “learn” concepts across human languages — I could be wrong in my understanding here), they should (might?) be able to transfer/apply those concepts to not-before-seen domains (maybe with a bit of “reasoning” prodded in).

                Krzysztof SakrejdaW This user is from outside of this forum
                Krzysztof SakrejdaW This user is from outside of this forum
                Krzysztof Sakrejda
                wrote last edited by
                #20

                @xrisk @malstrom @pseudonym just for clarity, LLMs don't learn concepts

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                • moinkM moink

                  @pseudonym That and LLM code often looks very nice on the surface so it takes a lot of vigilance and thinking to find the subtle errors. Code from juniors tends to have more immediate signs of errors or wrong mental models.

                  Krzysztof SakrejdaW This user is from outside of this forum
                  Krzysztof SakrejdaW This user is from outside of this forum
                  Krzysztof Sakrejda
                  wrote last edited by
                  #21

                  @moink @pseudonym one of the benefits of people *having* a mental model

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                  • degenerating degenerateH degenerating degenerate

                    @pseudonym It's certainly like that.

                    FWIW though LLMs don't have any shame or feeling they need to manage their reputation.

                    If you tell the same LLM that produced the report that it is now the QA manager and it must review the report from the standpoints of checking for missing or inaccurate citations, dubious claims or non-concise text, it will rat itself out and can be told to fix what it found.

                    This is the same LLM entirely...

                    nora 🐭 (she/her)N This user is from outside of this forum
                    nora 🐭 (she/her)N This user is from outside of this forum
                    nora 🐭 (she/her)
                    wrote last edited by
                    #22

                    @hopeless @pseudonym you are suggesting that you can just layer more shit onto the shit and after enough layers of shit it becomes not shit.

                    ⁂iwein⁂I 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • Pseudo NymP Pseudo Nym

                      If you replace a junior with #LLM and make the senior review output, the reviewer is now scanning for rare but catastrophic errors scattered across a much larger output surface due to LLM "productivity."

                      That's a cognitively brutal task.

                      Humans are terrible at sustained vigilance for rare events in high-volume streams. Aviation, nuclear, radiology all have extensive literature on exactly this failure mode.

                      I propose any productivity gains will be consumed by false negative review failures.

                      DibsD This user is from outside of this forum
                      DibsD This user is from outside of this forum
                      Dibs
                      wrote last edited by
                      #23

                      @pseudonym also, when the senior retires, who replaces them?

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                      • Pseudo NymP Pseudo Nym

                        If you replace a junior with #LLM and make the senior review output, the reviewer is now scanning for rare but catastrophic errors scattered across a much larger output surface due to LLM "productivity."

                        That's a cognitively brutal task.

                        Humans are terrible at sustained vigilance for rare events in high-volume streams. Aviation, nuclear, radiology all have extensive literature on exactly this failure mode.

                        I propose any productivity gains will be consumed by false negative review failures.

                        MaxM This user is from outside of this forum
                        MaxM This user is from outside of this forum
                        Max
                        wrote last edited by
                        #24

                        @pseudonym This, %100. The Glass Cage by Nicholas Carr dives into this in depth with examples from aviation, and how full-automation of flight, makes it harder to recover from a disaster situation for pilots.

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                        • Pseudo NymP Pseudo Nym

                          If you replace a junior with #LLM and make the senior review output, the reviewer is now scanning for rare but catastrophic errors scattered across a much larger output surface due to LLM "productivity."

                          That's a cognitively brutal task.

                          Humans are terrible at sustained vigilance for rare events in high-volume streams. Aviation, nuclear, radiology all have extensive literature on exactly this failure mode.

                          I propose any productivity gains will be consumed by false negative review failures.

                          Deborah Preuss, pcc 🇨🇦D This user is from outside of this forum
                          Deborah Preuss, pcc 🇨🇦D This user is from outside of this forum
                          Deborah Preuss, pcc 🇨🇦
                          wrote last edited by
                          #25

                          @pseudonym @mayintoronto … and: there will be no juniors to grow into seniors. 😨

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                          • eswillwalkerE eswillwalker

                            @avuko @pseudonym The main reason that machine learning works so well with material and protein design, weather forecasting, and such, is that there is good data available to “train” the model. The internet is the source of LLM training. It is full of garbage and LLMs are filling it with more garbage. The rule is the same as in 1970: GIGO (garbage in, garbage out). Only the scale is different.

                            Sir Dr Rusty o the Isle 🖤💛❤️R This user is from outside of this forum
                            Sir Dr Rusty o the Isle 🖤💛❤️R This user is from outside of this forum
                            Sir Dr Rusty o the Isle 🖤💛❤️
                            wrote last edited by
                            #26

                            @ELS @avuko @pseudonym Exactly this. The #AI_Slop is growing exponentially which in turn increases the slop bucket depth and size which in turn has already degraded the quality and validity of search engine results. Some estimates have put the accuracy and degradation at 20-35% *worse*. So having the exponential growth of #AI_Slop is in turn DEcreasing the accuracy and value of *search* exponentially as well. Doing all of that on *bigger and faster* machines and #LLMs will only hasten the processes in play and dramatically increase the probability of truly catastrophic outcomes and consequences.

                            And that is the case already in play, without bringing in all the issues raised in Bender and Hanna's recent book (mandatory reading)

                            Link Preview Image
                            The AI Con: How To Fight Big Tech's Hype and Create the Future We Want : Bender, Emily M.: Amazon.com.au: Books

                            The AI Con: How To Fight Big Tech's Hype and Create the Future We Want : Bender, Emily M.: Amazon.com.au: Books

                            favicon

                            (www.amazon.com.au)

                            My first encounter with so-called "artificial intelligence" was in 1964-5 as an undergrad psychology student in an (snail mail) exchange with one of the pioneer researchers at Stanford. I've been involved in parts of it and tracked it ever since. It is critical to understand that it has taken OVER 60 YEARS to get to the mediocre state we are now in. It didn't happen "yesterday" or even in "the last 2 years" as some snake oil #AI_Salesmen would have everyone believe.
                            Time to #BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor

                            And its now 2026...

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                            • Pseudo NymP Pseudo Nym

                              If you replace a junior with #LLM and make the senior review output, the reviewer is now scanning for rare but catastrophic errors scattered across a much larger output surface due to LLM "productivity."

                              That's a cognitively brutal task.

                              Humans are terrible at sustained vigilance for rare events in high-volume streams. Aviation, nuclear, radiology all have extensive literature on exactly this failure mode.

                              I propose any productivity gains will be consumed by false negative review failures.

                              The Psychotic Network FerretN This user is from outside of this forum
                              The Psychotic Network FerretN This user is from outside of this forum
                              The Psychotic Network Ferret
                              wrote last edited by
                              #27

                              @pseudonym We are using AI inexactly the worst ways possible.

                              Caveat: I am a never AI-er, due to the ethical issues surrounding how training data is gathered, the severe ecological and economic impacts, and the fact that deepfakes are objectively making the world a shittier place.

                              But pretend for a second, none of those are a problem anymore. We are still using AI wrong. You don't have it produce a mountain of code and have a human review it. You still use humans to produce the code, and have AI help other humans to review it. AI isn't terribly good at writing code, but it has been shown to be effective at finding a few classes of bugs humans are typically very bad at finding.

                              But that won't allow you to fire people and replace them with monkeys on typewriters, so it'll never happen.

                              ⁂iwein⁂I 1 Reply Last reply
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                              • R Robin Adams

                                @pseudonym Especially since the sort of mistake that LLMs make is the sort of mistake that's hardest for humans to spot. They produce bad code that looks like good code, because they were trained on a lot of good code and told "Write code that looks like this".

                                ⁂iwein⁂I This user is from outside of this forum
                                ⁂iwein⁂I This user is from outside of this forum
                                ⁂iwein⁂
                                wrote last edited by
                                #28

                                @robinadams yes

                                I'm not sure if this is a but or an and...

                                The recent @squads blogpost by @EmmaDelescolle and @Tiziano notes that LLMs are good at reviews.

                                In an LLM friendly context, seniors will delegate shit work to LLM of course. So now we have the horrid situation where young coders don't learn coding, and senior teaching skills atrophy. I'm sure retrospectives on this are delegated to an LLM as we speak somewhere 🤪

                                Isn't this just the absolutely perfect shitstorm?

                                @pseudonym

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                                • Pseudo NymP Pseudo Nym

                                  If you replace a junior with #LLM and make the senior review output, the reviewer is now scanning for rare but catastrophic errors scattered across a much larger output surface due to LLM "productivity."

                                  That's a cognitively brutal task.

                                  Humans are terrible at sustained vigilance for rare events in high-volume streams. Aviation, nuclear, radiology all have extensive literature on exactly this failure mode.

                                  I propose any productivity gains will be consumed by false negative review failures.

                                  JWcph, Radicalized By DecencyJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                  JWcph, Radicalized By DecencyJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                  JWcph, Radicalized By Decency
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #29

                                  @pseudonym - and by costs of false positives.

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                                  • nora 🐭 (she/her)N nora 🐭 (she/her)

                                    @hopeless @pseudonym you are suggesting that you can just layer more shit onto the shit and after enough layers of shit it becomes not shit.

                                    ⁂iwein⁂I This user is from outside of this forum
                                    ⁂iwein⁂I This user is from outside of this forum
                                    ⁂iwein⁂
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #30

                                    @nor4 @hopeless @pseudonym if hidden well enough, it's ok to step in it, right 🤪

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                                    • toldtheworldT toldtheworld

                                      @pseudonym I have posed this conundrum before and the answer I received is that there is also an opportunity cost to not moving faster and the risk of a catastrophic bug may not outweigh the risk of being overtaken by competitors, especially since that was already happening before LLMs anyway.

                                      Also, it *seems* models are improving at detecting these bugs, so they are being used to review changes, which, for the reasons you point out, they might be better at than people.

                                      RobotistryR This user is from outside of this forum
                                      RobotistryR This user is from outside of this forum
                                      Robotistry
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #31

                                      @toldtheworld @pseudonym I didn't think I'd see the day when I'd want to ask CEOs "If all your friends jumped off a cliff, would you do it too?"

                                      Overtaken by competitors how? How is it "overtaken by" when what is actually happening is "my competitors are introducing fundamental flaws into their business model that will completely vitiate it as a workable product so all I have to do is wait for them to fail"?

                                      Apparently the free market doesn't turn people into money-making machines that build products other people want, it turns CEOs into lemmings. Who knew?

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • The Psychotic Network FerretN The Psychotic Network Ferret

                                        @pseudonym We are using AI inexactly the worst ways possible.

                                        Caveat: I am a never AI-er, due to the ethical issues surrounding how training data is gathered, the severe ecological and economic impacts, and the fact that deepfakes are objectively making the world a shittier place.

                                        But pretend for a second, none of those are a problem anymore. We are still using AI wrong. You don't have it produce a mountain of code and have a human review it. You still use humans to produce the code, and have AI help other humans to review it. AI isn't terribly good at writing code, but it has been shown to be effective at finding a few classes of bugs humans are typically very bad at finding.

                                        But that won't allow you to fire people and replace them with monkeys on typewriters, so it'll never happen.

                                        ⁂iwein⁂I This user is from outside of this forum
                                        ⁂iwein⁂I This user is from outside of this forum
                                        ⁂iwein⁂
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #32

                                        @nuintari what is AI?

                                        Reason I ask is that for everything containing the least bit of software I can find a techbro willing to confabulate an 'ai' themed pitch deck. I'm not even kidding.

                                        I surely hope to keep my dishwasher, if I promise not to call it 'ai' (but I'm sure someone else will) 😅

                                        The Psychotic Network FerretN 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • ⁂iwein⁂I ⁂iwein⁂

                                          @nuintari what is AI?

                                          Reason I ask is that for everything containing the least bit of software I can find a techbro willing to confabulate an 'ai' themed pitch deck. I'm not even kidding.

                                          I surely hope to keep my dishwasher, if I promise not to call it 'ai' (but I'm sure someone else will) 😅

                                          The Psychotic Network FerretN This user is from outside of this forum
                                          The Psychotic Network FerretN This user is from outside of this forum
                                          The Psychotic Network Ferret
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #33

                                          @iwein Sorry, I've taken to just using the term AI when I mean LLM, even though I actually mean "Almost Incompetent," in my own head.

                                          ⁂iwein⁂I 1 Reply Last reply
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