• Chloé 🥕
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    6 days ago

    some telltale signs to look for in git repos:

    • .claude, .cursor
    • AGENTS.md, CLAUDE.md
    • the user claude has contributed (on github); this is especially easy to notice if you’ve blocked it, so i recommend you do that
    • CONTRIBUTING.md mentions that ai-generated contributions are allowed

    this list has a bunch of those stained projects, with receipts. but be warned: you will be severely disappointed in many projects you used to respect

    there is also this list which contains projects that have stated that they do not allow slop!

  • Artaca@lemdro.id
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    6 days ago

    Unpopular opinion, but I’m coming to the realization that I don’t really care if FOSS projects are experimenting with and leaning into AI. In most cases I am not donating and simply enjoying a product for free. I am no programmer I put trust in their code before, all I can do is continue to do the same. Now, paid software feels different. And I don’t mean donations, I mean if Autodesk started pumping out slop (which I don’t doubt is happening) then that feels far worse.

    Plus, I’ve gotten an insane amount of utility out of Claude as a regular dude. If I knew what I was doing a little more, I imagine that would feel pretty cool.

    • semi [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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      5 days ago

      I’m with you, as a maintainer of some small FOSS projects with very limited time, a lot of these complaints seem entitled and uninformed views by people that don’t contribute any code of their own.

      I’m sad that the internet doesn’t seem to make a difference between fully vibecoded low effort low quality projects, and experienced developers using GenAI in a very restricted, carefully reviewed way. Even further, some only use it as an additional code review method. If overburdened maintainers use it to get a leg up on delivering features while keeping the quality level up, that should be celebrated and not punished.