• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    151 year ago

    Who is going to trust an AI so much that they won’t risk it making coding errors?

    Sadly, too many

    • Flying Squid
      link
      English
      31 year ago

      Then their companies will go belly-up.

      • Jeena
        link
        fedilink
        English
        81 year ago

        I don’t believe it. If it’s good enough then they will ship and make money, and those who put people on it will be so slow that they will be just outperformed by those who don’t.

        • Flying Squid
          link
          English
          61 year ago

          If your code doesn’t work because you rely entirely on an AI to do it, you don’t have a business you can run unless you want to go back to paper and pencil.

          • Jeena
            link
            fedilink
            English
            01 year ago

            If your code doesn’t work because you rely on humans understanding it, you don’t have a business you can run. We already are there where humans have no idea why the computer does this or that decision because it’s so complex especially with all the machine learning and complex training data, etc. let’s not pretend it will get less complex with time.

            • Flying Squid
              link
              English
              31 year ago

              So your argument is that people will rely on AI entirely without making any redundancies, unlike now where they have more than one human so they can check for these issues because humans make coding errors?

              • enkers
                link
                fedilink
                English
                1
                edit-2
                1 year ago

                I kinda agree with them. Currently coding already is an abstraction. The average developer has very little idea what machine code their compiler actually produces, and for the most part they don’t need to care about this. Feeding an AI a specification is just a higher level of abstraction.

                For now, we’ll need people to check that AI produces code that does what we expect, but I believe at some point we’ll mostly take it for granted that they just do.

              • Jeena
                link
                fedilink
                English
                11 year ago

                My argument is that already today no human is able to and checks it when it comes to decision making models like for example if the car should go left or right around a obstacle. And over time we will have less straight forward classical programming doing decisions and more and more models doing decisions with hundreds or thousands of sensor inputs.

                • Flying Squid
                  link
                  English
                  31 year ago

                  And that means AI code shouldn’t be error-checked?

                  • Jeena
                    link
                    fedilink
                    English
                    11 year ago

                    That means that it right now can not be error checked and it will be even more difficult in the future.

                • lemmyvore
                  link
                  fedilink
                  English
                  1
                  edit-2
                  1 year ago

                  Except we already have fields (like pharma manufacturing) that have to deal with hundreds or thousands of inputs and variables, are automated, and we still manage to fully understand the stack as well as fully check everything.

                  Hint: when someone tells you they “can’t” check or understand what their software is doing, it’s a scam.

                  Normally they should be told to go back and figure it out before being allowed to ship any product. If you tried this in any other industry it would be laughable. Even in software it’s outrageous, imagine getting accounting software or even a simple file backup tool that doesn’t work some of the time and nobody can tell you how it works. Yet these companies get a pass putting cars like this on the road.