this post was submitted on 18 May 2026
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My gut feeling is that he is trying to keep the focus on humans who submit big reports without bothering to check in public forums that the bug has already been fixed
AI is useful; it just doesn't replace people.
Sir, this is social media nuance has no place here.
A thing is either all bad and anybody who says anything about it is probably a nazi or it is good and nothing you say in support of it can ever be wrong no matter how irrational or toxic those beliefs.
AI is bad and so it can't be useful because only one thing can be true at once. No you can't change my mind, yes I did my own research.
Flamebait style: people are getting in the way of AI fixing the bugs.
Use LLMs to triage the flood of reports, and implement the fixes.
Learn to stop worrying and love the Skynet. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dr._Strangelove
An actual interesting experiment: fork the system and work toward fully automated maintenance on the fork. Sure, if you want to make it fail you can, but try to succeed and see how it competes with / compares to old-school real-life Linux.
This is an extremely naive view of what the word “fail” means and of what such a “competition” would look like. Are you suggesting we just deploy increasingly critical systems onto this hypothetical fork until it predictably fails in an unpredictable way? Sorta like Calvin’s dad would rate bridges?
Man, we all kind of had this in mind, but what an incredible reference.
I said it was flamebait... only trust it with trust it has earned.