- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
Several big businesses have published source code that incorporates a software package previously hallucinated by generative AI.
Not only that but someone, having spotted this reoccurring hallucination, had turned that made-up dependency into a real one, which was subsequently downloaded and installed thousands of times by developers as a result of the AI’s bad advice, we’ve learned. If the package was laced with actual malware, rather than being a benign test, the results could have been disastrous.
I asked several AIs to write unit and integration tests for my code, and they all literally failed every single time. Some just straight up garbage, others just come up with shit I don’t even have in my code. AI is really good if you know what you’re doing and can spot what’s right and what’s wrong. Blindly taking its code is just useless, and dangerous, too.
It’s a matter of learning how to prompt it properly. It’s not a human and thus needs a different kind of instructions.