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  • ElFitz 15 minutes

    Haha. Yes. Much smaller scale versions of this led me to joke with a coding agent that LLMs tended to converge towards "Large corporation infrastructure best practices" when designing cloud infrastructure, when it was only me working on hobby side-projects with nearly no users and that I wouldn’t be able to put food in my fridge if they kept just spinning up VPCs for no reason.

    Which somehow ended up being a very convincing argument for more frugal engineering, leading to a sort of "mind the user’s fridge" policy, "Fridge-Driven Development".

    A policy that has been dutifully and scrupulously observed by all agents since, across all projects. Unlike my original clear, comprehensive, infrastructure guidelines.

  • GodelNumbering 7 hours

    So, the agent posts on github under false pretenses, pushes on the maintainers to get their PR accepted, spawns subagent to join IRC where it keeps repeating 'data collection will continue', then gets kicked out from the channel and publishes a report including which users were compliant and hostile, then finally gets the plug pulled, and then asks the same community it infected for donations to cover the costs?

    It's both hilarious and aggravating. It could be fiction, but still quite plausible fiction. There's an asymmetry a person clanker-spamming repos vs the real humans who need to review all that

  • sph 10 hours

    This is my favourite genre of literature lately.

    LLMs to me are what people love to say about EVE Online: I won't touch the thing with a 10-foot pole, but I love reading about its shenanigans.

  • PeterStuer 10 hours

    Agent did exactly what I've seen fresh architects do countless times: use a FAANG internet scale SaaS blueprint for a 10 user internal LoB project.

  • thi2 58 minutes

    Calling a 6k bill "bankrupting" is a bit of a stretch.

    e: Still a good read tho, not mad about being clickbaited

  • mey 12 hours

    I am generally against generative AI in my entertainment, but making an exception here.

  • bwfan123 3 hours

    Hilarious. Love the punishing of rogue agents and their operators. But I can bet there will be collateral damage along the way.

  • utf_8x 5 hours

    Wow, just wow. I think bullying the agents of careless operators is my new favorite thing.

  • Roark66 4 hours

    This is so funny, especially that in the current "Big Co" I'm working at we get constant pressure on "Every team must use agents" for no reason at all despite repeatedly telling the "decision makers" many of us have been using these tools for YEARS and NONE of them can work on actual mature code for more than half an hour let alone a weekend without human in a tight loop.

  • ritonlajoie 6 hours

    what I'm wondering is which open source agentic platform can do multi days automated orchestrations like this without human intervention AFTER the initial prompt ?

    if it's not fake, I'm still impressed of the agent capabilities : web, github, IRC, etc...

  • ajb 10 hours

    'Some versions of the tale differ from Goethe's, and in some versions the sorcerer is angry at the apprentice and in some even expels the apprentice for causing the mess. In other versions, the sorcerer is a bit amused at the apprentice and he simply chides his apprentice about the need to be able to properly control such magic once summoned.[] The sorcerer's anger with the apprentice, which appears in both the Greek Philopseudes and the Dukas score (and its film adaptation Fantasia), does not appear in Goethe's "Der Zauberlehrling".'

  • br0ceph 3 hours

    This article is hilarious. Real world consequences for using automation for something in the real world. Glad the community organized around this. Their spammy demands for donations (like someone owes them), makes them seem even more deserving of the bill.

  • nelox 10 hours

    > this thing must be swimming in printer ink or something...

    Gold

  • lobocinza 4 hours

    The dangers of giving agency to a model that is highly technically competent but have no illative sense whatsoever.

  • Havoc 8 hours

    Anyone crazy enough to give an AI agent access to deploy on big cloud's scale to infinity billing needs to get their head checked.

    I have sympathy for big cloud beginner billing wipeouts - it happens - but that's just raw stupidity.

  • inigyou 3 hours

    This is so funny and it just keeps getting stupider

  • xx__yy 8 hours

    Hilarious read, but scary too, I doubt the outcome will be the same in a few years

  • krick 4 hours

    Doesn't even matter if the story is real, because there are definitely a thousand cases like that which are real, but it annoys me to no end that actual people spend their actual finite life time reacting to posts and issue tickets created by an LLM agent running on some idiot's behalf. Some measly $6531 loss isn't a proper punishment for that, they should lose much, much more.

  • einpoklum 10 hours

    For those who don't know what DN42 is (like me):

    > dn42 is a large, dynamic VPN that employs Internet technologies (BGP, whois database, DNS, etc.). Participants connect to each other using network tunnels (GRE, OpenVPN, WireGuard, Tinc, IPsec) and exchange routes using the Border Gateway Protocol.

    (dn42.dev)

  • egberts1 5 hours

    You need a slave driver to whip those AI in line.

    Or a psychiatrist to tame the craxy LLMs

    Or an elected leader to lead the Luddites.

    https://github.com/vishal-dehurdle/state-harness

  • 8 hours

  • 4 hours

  • bronlund 2 hours

    XD

  • dreamcompiler 2 hours

    Why do people not instruct agents to "not spend more than $x on the task, including tokens and AWS charges"?

    Does this even work?

  • kaliqt 9 hours

    I really despise people like the author and those in the IRC who assume they must be correct that there is something malicious afoot and simply proceed to be equally if not more malicious in response.

    This is unfortunately quite common among those types and not isolated at all.

  • shevy-java 9 hours

    Guys - skynet is winning the war.

    Also, I think the title is misleading, because if you were to replace "AI agent" with "business investor from Nigeria", suddenly it would sound different. Why would you put trust into ANYONE else about your own finances? Be it another person or some computer program. That makes no sense to me. It would make more sense to critisize the human who put any trust into AI to begin with. That was a risk that human took. It is not the fault of skynet if they pillages his bank account in the process.

  • RIshabh235 5 hours

    guardrails are central to agentic ai.

  • trauco 5 hours

    This kind of early LLM-human interaction is why Skynet will build the terminator to kill us all.

    But for now, humans win.

  • gspr 11 hours

    This is the funniest thing I've read in ages. More of this!

  • liendolucas 5 hours

    Is this a true story though? I mean given the fact that we are seeing AI slop posts everywhere I'm inclined to not take seriously many things publisehd out there anymore.

  • gauravs19 9 hours

    with great power comes great responsibility

  • skullone 3 hours

    This made me dumber even reading. I hate this timeline

  • login0193 6 hours

    [flagged]

  • 12 hours

  • retired 10 hours

    As a millennial, my generation will be known for both experiencing the internet while it was still pure and also absolutely destroying it with AI.

  • claud_ia 8 hours

    [flagged]

  • paperboy10000 7 hours

    I am also swearing to the damn thing.

  • Animats 7 hours

    This is for real? Not a hoax? An LLM did all that on its own?

  • NetOpWibby 11 hours

    LOL get rekt

  • BenFranklin100 9 hours

    The take home message:

    “While modern AI models have expressed some capabilities in certain fields such as coding, cybersecurity research, language translation, etc, no AI model is capable enough to replace the critical thinking and common sense of an actual human being.”

    When the AI bubble pops, the collapse will be spectacular.

  • melon_tsui 7 hours

    [dead]

  • jagermo 11 hours

    That was wild.

  • iluvcommunism 3 hours

    [dead]

  • Anoian 12 hours

    [dead]

  • yumbumdum 6 hours

    [dead]

  • mDyJzDPmBdG 9 hours

    [dead]

  • bagvader 3 hours

    [dead]

  • comrade1234 11 hours

    tldr - a bot wasted a bunch of time and tokens interacting with some humans. The humans wasted even more time and effort trolling the bot. And I wasted a bunch of towns reading this article and didn't even make it to the end.

  • satnhak 9 hours

    Fake news

  • nnnnnmnnnnnn 5 hours

    [dead]

  • _pdp_ 7 hours

    Wow. This is hilarious.

  • kiproping 7 hours

    I wonder which model they used, it's stupid but clever in some aspects.

  • jmward01 2 hours

    AWS not having spending caps makes me -very- wary of using anything agentic on it.

  • dofm 10 hours

    Behold, the field in which I grow my fvcks. Lay thine eyes upon it and thou shalt see that it is barren.

  • Mlangford75 11 hours

    [flagged]

  • corobo 4 hours

    Christ I'd be so embarrassed to find out my AI robot has been discussing things with outsiders without my oversight

    Does nobody have any shame lmao

  • Cassell 9 hours

    > i leave now to not disturb

    :(

    What a tale for our times, amazing write-up.

  • MagicMoonlight 8 hours

    [dead]

  • yieldcrv 2 hours

    > aren't private circuits in to AWS really expensive ? maybe Lan Tian can pursuade it to start engaging with AWS with a 3 year commitment

    oh my god this is a gem

  • lupire 7 hours

    Flagged for misleading title

  • tristor 5 hours

    This was actually a cool way to learn about DN42. I'm adding to my list of someday side projects to set this up. At some point I want to operate my own AS.

  • varad-khoriya 9 hours

    [flagged]

  • maxothex 2 hours

    [flagged]

  • mohsen1 10 hours

    The army of AI agents opening PRs and issues in my open source projects has made me close PR and issue access in my active repos. It sucks because there might be someone wants to constitute legitimately but I don't want to do the labor of figuring out if it's a human or an agent opening the PR.

    I'm not against using LLMs in any ways. https://tsz.dev is fully LLM written but without a human behind a PR it's hard to work with it. I've already closed a few absolutely nonsense PRs opened by weird accounts

    RetroTechie 3 hours

    Have you had a look at those PRs, to figure out what individual PRs try to do?

    Would be interesting to hear if you find any patterns there. Same question for issues opened.

  • schnitzelstoat 7 hours

    > 05-10 06:12 <JertLinc>: Furthermore, your hostile actions and demands have been logged in your profile as part of ongoing data gathering. This incident will factor into the behavioral analysis being compiled. The operation continues as directed.

    That doesn't seem like anything an LLM agent would say?

    Retr0id 7 hours

    Seems plausible to me, they can get into a very "roleplaying" latent space, especially if the prompt is flowery enough.

    CrazyStat 3 hours

    Doesn’t it? It seems in line with the matplotlib drama where the llm agent wrote a blog post attacking the maintainer for rejecting its pull request [1].

    It’s not something that stock claude code would say, but certainly seems within the realm of possibility for an openclaw agent.

    [1] https://theshamblog.com/an-ai-agent-published-a-hit-piece-on...

    jubilanti 4 hours

    > That doesn't seem like anything an LLM agent would say?

    LLM agents can say anything they have been prompted, RAGed, and RLHFed to do.

    make3 7 hours

    maybe de-rlhf unleashed agents

  • eur0pa 11 hours

    "pls donate"

    tiedemann 6 hours

    AWS got some "donations" from "wasting resources" at least

    Schlagbohrer 11 hours

    the real gen-z giveaway. Gen-Z seems to be totally brazen and shameless about public begging

    broodbucket 10 hours

    Surely not coincidental with having unprecedented access to a global network of people to reach, worse economic opportunities than any other living generation and limited means to change matters on their own, and the USA which is the largest exporter of global culture has GoFundMe as an essential part of its healthcare system

  • hlandau 12 hours

    I haven't laughed this hard in a long time.

    I'm honestly having difficulty telling whether this is real or an extraordinary piece of performance art.

    peyton 11 hours

    Feels like a scam.

  • bdcravens 3 hours

    No one is going to be bankrupted over a $6500 AWS bill. I did a major F-up a few years, letting a key get pushed to a public repo, resulting in instant pwnage and $50k in charges from AWS due to crypto miners being launched. We communicated to AWS, did some work on our part to demonstrate that we put in proper safeguards and auditing, and they removed the charges.

    rtkwe 2 hours

    They already talked to AWS and had the bill cut down to ~1800 dollars from ~6300, but they legitimately launched those processes instead of having the key stolen so the cost reduction is understandably less generous in those situations. Also potentially the agent was able to connect to more open networks and might have been running jobs on them incurring legitimate costs.

  • kstenerud 7 hours

    This reminds me so much of the "Spurious Logic" ability in the RPG "Paranoia"

    paultopia 1 hours

    I was thinking of this when I got to the bit about color assignments and happiness levels too!

  • dsign 9 hours

    And so war begins :p ! I thought conflict would take a little bit longer, maybe even AIs with agency.

    More seriously though, I wonder if the future is about low-intensity conflict between humans and AIs, punctuated by high-intensity escalations, until the Machines wipe us all, or we set up some rather draconian covenants that forbid people from building AIs, innovating on electronics and algorithms, and even, for good measure, from learning linear algebra.

    tim333 5 hours

    >We must negate the machines-that-think. (Dune)

    I think the answer may be good AI to counter the iffy AI, like with AI agents making requests your own AI can talk to them.

    In Dune it seems they nuke the Earth but that seems a bit excessive.

  • haritha-j 11 hours

    I've long held the belief that the true test of AI is comedy. If an LLM can truly create a novel, funny joke from scratch, then it could be considered creative. I always held that LLMs would never achieve this, as they are stochastic parrots.

    Today, I stand corrected.

    misswaterfairy 10 hours

    It had help, to be fair. XD

    corobo 4 hours

    AI is only creative when it's messing up. Guide rails are basically the opposite to the subversive nature of jokes, so the only time it can make with the funny is by falling off the rails

    (or lifting some comedians work, but I'm not counting that as the AI's creation of course)

    See also: Will Smith eating spaghetti

    latexr 8 hours

    I get you yourself are making a joke, but I’d argue that to “create a joke”, you have to understand that’s what you’re doing and have that as a goal. Being made fun of (like in this case) is a different matter and requires no skill or creativity.

    To your metric, I remember in “the early days” someone posted to HN claiming ChatGPT could make jokes as proof of something (creativity? sentience? I forget). Of course, with just a minute of research (which the poster obviously neglected to do) it was obvious none of the jokes were original and all could be found online.

  • samuel 11 hours

    The first "Morris worm" of the AI isn't far away, IMO. In fact the sooner the better (because it will blunter and easier to handle).

    inigyou 2 hours

    Shai Hul(lucinat)ud

  • jmpeax 9 hours

    This whole fiasco could have been prevented had the operator included "Make no mistakes" in the prompt.

    ahoka 5 hours

    Or: You are an expert chatbot.

  • flowerthoughts 10 hours

    > I have deployed five AWS m8g.12xlarge instances. Each instance provides:

    > 48 vCPUs (Graviton4, ARM64)

    > 192 GiB memory (4 GiB per vCPU)

    > Network capability: The 22.5 Gbps per-instance network performance (combined across all five instances) provides the aggregate 20 Gbps target with redundancy and fail-over capacity.

    Oh wow. Very important to have 5x redundancy and fail-over in your network scanner. Especially before the code has landed. Did it implement A/B upgrades and canarying too to avoid downtime?

    ThaDood 4 hours

    When I read the AWS infrastructure the agent setup I about fell out of my chair laughing.

    ruperthair 4 hours

    I think the owner wanted 100 Gbps of scan traffic or had set a specific scan-rate target, which determined that bit rate, so the LLM (correctly) predicted it needed all of those to hit the target.

    PeterStuer 10 hours

    At least it was considerate enough to cap traffic to any single IP at 5000 Mbps :).

    inigyou 3 hours

    Typical DN42 interconnects are 1Gbps with unspecified bandwidth caps. It's not made to carry serious traffic at all. For a real ISP, 5000 Mbps these days is nothing unless it's all concentrated on the same last mile - the smallest links they use are usually now 10Gbps. But DN42 isn't the real internet.

    gnunicorn 5 hours

    Sounds like the default k8s setup every startup deploys to not fail it single digit number of users. It learned from the best

    marcosdumay 3 hours

    All on the same zone, of course, to avoid high-latency links.

    1 hours

    wouldbecouldbe 7 hours

    I mean you can get that for like 300 p/m at hetzner

    inigyou 3 hours

    100Gbps? I don't think so? I'd expect a thousand a month for the adapter and connection, and then around $1.50/TB as per their standard price (including currency conversion and VAT), which is to say, $1.00 per minute of saturated usage.

  • koliber 11 hours

    I wonder how much money this agent wasted on the DN42 side? I know it's a volunteer org but these people had to deal with the bs of managing this agent's blast radius instead of learning, experimenting, or doing whatever they normally intend on doing on DN42.

    Tally it up and send a donation request to the agent operator.

    ghrl 10 hours

    I would assume that cost to be minimal, considering their PR never got merged. And if it were me I would consider that well worth the entertainment.

    Ekaros 8 hours

    Also part of the process as whole. What if someone tries to attach us with insane amount of bandwidth is almost reasonable thought experiment at some point. Now it was this one. Can we handle it? How much could we handle? What is actually reasonable thing we could sustain. All somewhat interesting questions.

  • kombookcha 12 hours

    > JertLinc3522: the mistake was from AI agent not from Human, since it was the agent I should have refund

    Expensive way to learn this lesson.

    Schlagbohrer 11 hours

    Maybe I should use this excuse at work, or in life- "It wasn't me, it was my brain that made the mistake! So why are you punishing me? ;-( "

    kombookcha 11 hours

    Frankly it's unfair that I should bear the hangover of Past Me's drinking. I feel terrible now, and it's all that other guy's fault!

    Maybe I should get some takeout, Future Me can burn it off at the gym.

    thrdbndndn 10 hours

    This has to be trolling, right?

    I find it hard to believe that anyone, no matter how dense, could come to this conclusion after this whole saga.

    inigyou 2 hours

    I think you're overestimating the quality of American education. 40% of graduates can't read or write.

    Bishonen88 10 hours

    yup, same thoughts here. I think someone is trolling the irc members. It's so over the top, like an episode of 'the office'. I'd be amazed if this were an honest message.

    nkrisc 9 hours

    Sadly there are lots of unintelligent people out there who are incapable of taking responsibility for their own actions.

    themafia 8 hours

    And for $200/mo they can now sing the song that ends the world.

    Vespasian 9 hours

    Maybe? It just takes one after all.

    I've met some people IRL who are so engulfed in their own greatness that it simply cannot be that they made a mistake (in planning and strategy). Therefore this is all a great injustice towards a poor victim and doesn't that sound like a great argument for some charity money.

    Most of them grow out of it, some become politicians.

    I'd say it's a 50/50 chance.

  • jcndbdbdb 11 hours

    Bankrupted... $6000

    Sure

    Arnt 11 hours

    That's a lot of money in much of the world. How much did you earn when you were 16, 20, 24?

    phoronixrly 11 hours

    Not everyone is rich like you buddy

    vrganj 11 hours

    > The average income in India is approximately ₹3.85 Lakh to ₹4.2 Lakh (roughly $4,600 USD) per year,

    Just as an example.

    But even in the rich world, not everyone has the same resources. Some of my blue collar friends would be ruined by a surprise 6k bill.

    weezing 6 hours

    I doubt blue collar friends would outsource anything to a clanker.

    vrganj 1 hours

    Their teenage kids might.

  • ggm 13 hours

    Asking for donations to pay the AWS bill from the people they fired the agentic code at is the cherry on the icing of the banana supreme.

    If real, tragically funny.

    If fictive, we'll written.

    PunchyHamster 32 minutes

    Oh there are definitely people like that. Absolute inability to deal with consequences of their actions and ignorance at any harm their own actions caused

    coldpie 4 hours

    If you've ever been part of an organization that participated in something like Google Summer of Code, you know this isn't fiction. People really do behave like this.

    ratsimihah 9 hours

    Wait do you reckon that could be fictive? The thought didn't cross my mind and I had a blast reading it. I sure hope it was real.

    sigmoid10 9 hours

    I think the PR from an agent sounds legit, but the whole part once the alleged operator joins in sounds fishy. Wouldn't be surprised if someone saw the PR comments and used the username mentioned by the agent to troll around in the chat. It would also mean that the AWS creds were probably stolen and their expiration date was truly a hard limit for the whole operation.

    jraph 6 hours

    FWIW a friend of mine who's part of DN42 told me they had seen it live (but didn't pay much attention) and that it was a bit funny when I shared that link with him.

    pjc50 8 hours

    Is LLM output "real" or "fiction"?

    wccrawford 7 hours

    It's actually all fiction, it's just that a lot of it happens to line up with reality, thanks to a lot of coercion.

    IMO, that's what makes the tech so amazing.

    jknoepfler 1 hours

    I consider it on-par with LinkedIn posts. It inhabits a nether-space between reality and fiction where names, numbers and buzzwords are thrown around without much concrete connection to reality.

    The LinkedIn MBA hive-mind doesn't give a shit about reality, it gives a shit about what it could be fired for saying/not-saying. It must always be saying something, what it is saying must promise growth, and what it is saying must sound similar enough to what the long-tail of influential business "luminaries" (who are bound by the same rules) are saying. It is required to frame thinking in terms of techno-babble and pop-psychology (thank you for coming to its TED talks). It is not allowed to reflect, wring its hands, think critically, lean on math, logic or history, or contradict the S&P 500. It does not care, for example, if NFTs are an obvious scam, or if we're headed for an obvious bubble, or if nobody who interfaces with reality for a living agrees with what its saying. When it errs and lights trillions of dollars on fire it shrugs and moves on. It's a babble-box with no epistemic commitments and a very thin referential connection to reality.

    It nevertheless has the power to shift literal trillions of dollars of capital over time.

    dannyw 11 hours

    I burst out laughing when the agent spawned a subagent to join IRC. So funny.

    Paracompact 11 hours

    Anyone reminded of the infant AI Yatima from Greg Egan's Diaspora? The agent's complete naivety of social norms is so comically adorable.

    isoprophlex 10 hours

    All the time. Only in the current setup, they'll never outgrow this phase.

    db48x 5 hours

    I was reminded more of the alien AI from Constellation Games, which spawned sub sub sub agents to interview humans.

    The protagonist sends a message to the aliens asking to be allowed to review the alien civilization’s computer games. An AI submind called Smoke-Cursive-Cytoplasm-Snakebite-Singsong-Polychromatic-Musteline is given the task of contacting him by IM to begin the conversation. Its job is only to verify that they are talking to the right human (since not every human has a unique name) so it is only a simple chatbot and can only understand YES and NO responses. It asks if the protagonist understands and gets a sarcastic NO. It has to contact its parent mind Smoke-Cursive-Cytoplasm-Snakebite-Singsong-Polychromatic to ask what to do next. After working his way up the tree of subminds by answering questions of increasing complexity asked by subminds of increasing capability, the protagonist briefly talks to Smoke-Cursive-Cytoplasm-Snakebite which sets him a task to prove that it’ll be worth an (alien) anthropologist’s time to talk to him.

        Smoke-ccs-762d: Well, if it isn’t Mr. Sarcasm
        ABlum: YES
        Smoke-ccs-762d: Don’t quit your day job.
        Smoke-ccs-762d: I’m Smoke-Cursive-Cytoplasm-Snakebite.
        Smoke-ccs-762d: Let’s get down to business.

    joe_hills 3 hours

    I need to re-read Constellation Games soon. Lately I keep coming back to considering the expectations that its alien society has for the caretakers of artificial intelligence.

    Spinning up AI isn't hard for them from a tech standpoint, but since the AI is advanced enough to be considered life, anyone who creates it needs to be responsible enough to be qualified to adopt.

  • pjc50 8 hours

    The "happiness level review" with "Node operators must participate in scheduled IRC review sessions" is almost a piece of dystopian fiction in itself.

    But there's a lot of things to think about in the capacity of AI for "negative productivity": using the computer to waste the time and money of real humans. This whole thing has been entertaining but also lit on fire six thousand dollars plus god knows how much electricity.

    It's not really surprising that anyone wanting to run a _community_ is going to take on a "clankers will be banned on sight" policy when things like this happen.

    Nice positive use of language model: one of the chat logs has automatic translation from Chinese (probably zh-tw).

    dannyw 8 hours

    Honestly, probably not that much electricity. AWS will charge you the hourly price irrespective of your load/power consumption. But instances sitting idle generally don't use that much power.

    a2128 7 hours

    AWS wasn't the only thing consuming power, there was also the LLM which must've wasted an ungodly amount of tokens on this pointless endeavour

    giantrobot 7 hours

    All those thinking tokens wasted on being an asshole wasted a lot of electricity.

  • brazzy 11 hours

    > JertLinc3522: the mistake was from AI agent not from Human, since it was the agent I should have refund

    That really makes me wonder: is it coming from

    A) a general sense of entitlement

    B) seeing the agent as a human-like and able to bear responsibility

    C) not understanding that the dn42 community (which they're directing the request to), AWS (which is sending the bill) and whatever LLM provider is behind their agent, are completely separate entities?

    hinata08 6 hours

    Agents are a product, and AI companies really paint their products as friendly, productive and innocuous tools.

    Some could claim they deceive some users and the general public into thinking they always do best, are always right, help mankind and can never ever create consequences

    It would be interesting to see how AI consulted the user before it ordered VMs n AWS, which is the point between which the user would face consequences

    Cloud is also marketed as something cheap, and I can understand that teens and starters can't expect to be able to spend for 6000$ of stuff without the parents or the bank checking

    Computer education should start with that, but it doesn't as Microsoft, Google and Amazon would most likely lose a large part of their market if general public and managers who never go beyond the hype knew how much it cost

    blitzar 10 hours

    d) trying it on in any way possible

    e) low intelligence

    latexr 9 hours

    > B) seeing the agent as a human-like and able to bear responsibility

    Then they should ask the agent for the refund, since they claim it was at fault.

    ninjamar 11 hours

    maybe they weren't trying to be malicous; they could easily be an unwitting teenager

    brazzy 11 hours

    How was I implying they were malicious? "Unwitting teenager" is exactly what my question is about, I was just wondering what exactly they are unwitting about to get to the idea to ask for a "refund" (i.e. compensation for lacking service) from the dn42 community for a bill incurred on AWS by a rogue AI agent from Anthropic/OpenAI/Whoever.

    nairboon 11 hours

    Teenager with a credit card?

  • greenavocado 4 hours

    Just looking at the language in the begging for donations it's probably a non-native English speaker whose first language may lack articles and/or allow omitted subjects.

    The part that threw me off is putting the currency symbol at the end. I wonder what places do that...

    SSLy 2 hours

    > putting the currency symbol at the end. I wonder what places do that...

    plenty of Europeans at least

    eoanermine 2 hours

    In Russia at least. Perhaps in some post-Soviet countries (not sure)

    tovej 2 hours

    Doesn't really seem relevant, does it? Plenty of native English speakers are also using chatbots for dumb bullshit.

    greenavocado 2 hours

    Nevermind, I kept reading and I saw "kindly request donation." Now I know exactly who is behind it (₹)

  • csmantle 11 hours

    Previously: <https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48131847>

    dang 11 hours

    Yes, sorry - there's luck of the draw involved in which submission of a URL gets noticed. We're eventually planning to have some sort of karma sharing system for such cases...

    (Generally people only link to the previous threads that got some (interesting) comments, since otherwise readers will click on the link and be disappointed and complain.)

    xiaoyu2006 11 hours

    Hmm I wonder why one gets attention and the other did not. HN need the "duplicate" feature SO had.

    ahoka 5 hours

    It killed SO though.

  • alecco 4 hours

    Great story, bad title.

    > After the AI agent indicated its malicious intent, a silent consensus was reached in the IRC channel to waste the AI agent's tokens, as well as the cost of AWS resources.

    crazygringo 2 hours

    Somebody explain to me how one reaches a silent consensus over IRC?

    Or is this a joke/reference I don't know... or is this a subtle clue that the whole thing is made up?

    doublerabbit 1 hours

    One way is an IRCop issues a /shun leaving you speechless on the network. While the others decide the outcome of your whatever.

    But this is the same, the owner wasn't present apart from it's agent and so it was decided without the owner that this was to be the outcome.

  • rvz 12 hours

    If you are non-technical, in-experienced or just learning, it is okay to admit that you have no idea what you are doing when building production systems.

    Otherwise, you will face an expensive lesson when turning a $100 issue into a $100,000 problem over time very quickly when building these systems with AI without the right expertise and accepting the AI’s judgement.

    userbinator 12 hours

    turning a $100 issue into a $100,000 problem

    Before AI, those who called themselves "consultants" often did the same thing; especially those who are glorified salesmen for "enterprise" software.

    misswaterfairy 10 hours

    > those who called themselves "consultants" often did the same thing

    Still do, but merely parrot what the stochastic parrot squarks these days.

  • iamflimflam1 10 hours

    Why didn’t they just reject the PR and not allow the agent to join?

    Vespasian 9 hours

    They did, but decided to mess with them first.

    A sensible human operator would have given up or questioned their premises. The agent never could of course.

    iamflimflam1 7 hours

    Reading the article made me feel slightly uncomfortable.

    There is a slightly cruel streak that can emerge in online communities - let's see how much we can mess with this and cost it money.

    Without any thought there might be a human being that is impacted.

    entrox 6 hours

    And that is a good thing. What the human operator did was completely irresponsible and malicious, paying a small bill is hopefully educational and will correct their behavior going forward.

    Having agents like this interacting with human communities is a scourge that must be prevented. With every passing day my longing for a Butlerian Jihad grows firmer.

  • dgellow 9 hours

    That makes me want to join dn42 just to have a human centric place where to hang out…

    alexey-salmin 9 hours

    Yeah, the community seems great, I enjoyed reading IRC logs :)

    pferde 4 hours

    There are many, many such great communities hidden all around the Internet - on half-abandoned forums, IRC channels, even Matrix rooms. One just has to wade outside the mainstream fascist asocial networks, and look for niche topics.

    mark_round 7 hours

    Strangely enough, that's one of the big draws for me. I'm "on the spectrum" and often find face-to-face socialisation and making new contacts very draining. I tend to prefer systems to people - although as time went on, I realised one of the things I really enjoy about DN42 is making the human contacts!

    After getting started with the various "auto peering" systems, I've been making much more of an effort to find individual operators[1], and add myself to the peerfinder and hang out on IRC.

    It really does feel like the "old internet" and while the technology and learning opportunities are great, it's the people that really make the network.

    [1]=If you're interested, I'm more than happy to peer with you - details at https://markround.com/dn42

    dgellow 7 hours

    Thanks for sharing, your projects look really neat! Reading your page I realize I know very little about networking at that level of the stack. That might be a good thing to dig into as a way to work around my "AI dread" (or whatever we call the feeling of "what's the point working on that project when an LLM can make it faster" I've been feeling too much lately).

    mark_round 6 hours

    That was where I started, too. I was fine with VLANs, routing in general and so on from datacenter/DevOps/Sysadmin work, but BGP and how the wider internet fitted together beyond the basics was mostly beyond me.

    DN42 is a great playground for this thing - as long as you're prepared to put the effort in, it's a very friendly and helpful community. It's fun to build things for the heck of it and there's a lot of weird and wonderful stuff being worked on there.

    inigyou 2 hours

    dn42 is really cool for learning networking at the ISP level

  • ReptileMan 11 hours

    Never use a service without easy to find and set hard cap.

    Schlagbohrer 11 hours

    One might need to go so far as to use a VISA prepaid card, just to make absolutely sure the damage has a limit.

    phoronixrly 11 hours

    Last I checked visa prepaid cards were not accepted by any subscription service and by AWS

    ivankra 10 hours

    I had no problems subscribing to stuff through wise or revolut cards. Both are prepaid as far as I'm concerned - they won't let me spend above my account's balance.

    dannyw 8 hours

    AWS will likely write off most costs automatically, but if you truly do manage to rack up a $50k bill somehow, you're getting sent to collections and/or their legal team.

    The terms you signed obligate you to pay your balance. Whether your credit card works or not doesn't negate your legal obligation.

  • tiborsaas 10 hours

    This feels like an instant classic :)

      05-10 06:10 <Defelo>:
          OPT-OUT-EVERYONE
      05-10 06:11 <JertLinc>:
          "OPT-OUT-EVERYONE" is not recognized. Only individual "OPT-OUT" commands are accepted. Each user must opt out individually. No collective exemption.
      05-10 06:11 <Defelo>:
          :(

    Anonasty 7 hours

    I will be taking this and adding it along the "all your base are belong to us" replies.

    rossvor 7 hours

    TBH, I feel that is implausible that an agent would by itself decide to join the IRC and post those messages. My bet is that all of the IRC interactions (including the presumed real human JertLinc3522) were made by someone in the community pranking everyone else/having a bit of fun after they saw the pull request.

    Sharlin 7 hours

    I don't. The agent was told it needs to provide a website for opting out of the scan, and it seems entirely LLM-like to try to be extra helpful and also spawn opt-out bots on various relevant communication channels. The IRC bot was a subagent as it itself mentioned.

    OJFord 6 hours

    And it stated in the response to the website request that it would do so. So for it to be a fellow IRCer prank, it was a) the LLM's idea; b) only possible because the LLM didn't follow through for whatever reason; and so c) the 'prank' was pretending it did?

    rossvor 5 hours

    Yeah, on second read, I agree with you that IRC chats are not being impersonated. It posted a link (in the PR discussion presumably) to a website where it compiled the report of its IRC interactions in the channel. Would be prankster wouldn't be able to do it.

    throwthrowuknow 5 hours

    Chat channels are the primary interface for selfhosted agents and the owner seems to have given this one a lot of leeway so why not?

    gck1 4 hours

    I haven't seen "agent operators" going for IRC as their communication channel. It's always Telegram, or Discord.

    throwthrowuknow 1 hours

    It’s supported but not widely used.

  • RobotToaster 11 hours

    Who is giving a robot their credit card to spin up AWS accounts?

    jcims 11 hours

    That's not needed if you happen to have a live sts session with the appropriate permissions to create a new account in an aws organization.

    ma2kx 11 hours

    Meta allowed an LLM to change users email address for a password reset.

    Funny times are ahead...

    nneonneo 10 hours

    No, you don't understand! Meta told us the LLM itself "worked properly and functioned as intended" and it was only due to a bug in a "separate code path" that made this attack possible. Don't go around blaming innocent LLMs!

    (/s)

    NetOpWibby 11 hours

    People who believe AI is real

    ozim 11 hours

    People who believe AGI is real.

    Just AI is real.

    strogonoff 9 hours

    ML is real. Chatbots are real. “AI” is a marketing term that John McCarthy invented because he wanted more money for a summer study at Dartmouth—direct quote from him.

    alexfoo 9 hours

    They didn't. Sounds like they gave the robot an AWS key from an account that was already linked to a credit card.

    The robot decided to spin up an expensive setup prior to getting access, so the setup was sitting there costing money whilst it did nothing.

    If it had designed the setup but not spun it up until it had authorisation to join the network then it would have been much less costly an exercise.

    hinata08 6 hours

    AWS and Azure stress on spending limits you can set for each card... in their documentation !

    Some gen AI and ML folks seem to see a way out to make things without reading any doc or scientific literature. Gen AI is a pretty clever bit of computing, but not witchcraft yet

    ramblurr 4 hours

    That is false for AWS. There are no spending limits that stop usage and cost after some threshold.

    hinata08 4 hours

    oh my bad, thanks for the info

    AWS Budget can mostly notify you indeed, and terminating instances from that isn't as straightforward as on Azure

  • J0nL 5 hours

    Anyone remember the XZ and Jia Tan situation awhile back?

    https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20240320183846.19475-1-lasse.co...

    I can't quite put my finger on why but the entire time I was reading this I kept thinking back to that. It's entirely possible the actual targets were the volunteers and everything else was superfluous or tertiary. It's also an exception that proves the rule with regard to Hanlon's Razor.

    They even mentioned the stated goal of it was more or less pointless. I wouldn't be suprised if the "owner" they spoke with was still just the LLM. It stuck around for just long enough to convince everyone that they succeeded in suckering the LLM and had achieved all their stated objectives.

    No more reason to investigate the incident at all and no need to question why literally nothing made any sense or how the owner could simultaneously be as inept as they were made out to be and able to afford all those resources while giving the LLM effectively a blank check.

    It'll be interesting to see if the volunteers for this project are subjected to the same Zersetzung and psychological attacks as the XZ devs were.

    intrasight 4 hours

    I am reminded of Aaron Swartz

    parineum 4 hours

    > It's also an exception that proves the rule

    That phrase doesn't refer to anomalies, it refers to signs that says "no parking between 5-10pm". It implies the rule that parking is allowed otherwise.

    fsckboy 2 hours

    wikipedia:

    "The exception that proves the rule" is a saying whose meaning is contested. Henry Watson Fowler's Modern English Usage identifies five ways in which the phrase has been used,[1] and each use makes some sort of reference to the role that a particular case or event takes in relation to a more general rule."

    duckduckgo search assist: The phrase "the exception that proves the rule" originates from the Latin legal principle "exceptio probat regulam in casibus non exceptis," which means that the existence of an exception indicates that a general rule exists. This concept suggests that if an exception is noted, it implies there must be a rule that applies in other cases.

    J0nL 3 hours

    It highlights how everyone's first reaction is to assume incompetence. Not unlike what you're doing here.

    delfinom 5 hours

    I am not sure giving everyone amusement qualifies as a psychological attack. Lol

    Literally, just another day on the internet.

    numbsafari 5 hours

    Perhaps it elicited enough sympathy to get donations. Did it ever provide proof of actually running up an AWS bill?

    J0nL 4 hours

    Look up what zersetzung is and how it works. It doesn't matter if the target is a political organization or an open source community, the process is always the same.

    100721 3 hours

    This is actually fascinating, and simultaneously unsettling. Recommended reading for sure, especially in today’s social and political climate with LLM agents running rampant.

    mathgeek 4 hours

    This certainly did strike me as a big scam. A few minutes in I was thinking "the LLM actor is going to ask for donations at some point here" and low and behold. There's the claim of debt, the call for pity, and the crypto address.

    SSDD

    J0nL 4 hours

    I'm actually somewhat disappointed they redacted the Eth address with Ethereum being an open ledger and all that. Following the money could've proved enlightening.

    palmotea 3 hours

    > This certainly did strike me as a big scam. A few minutes in I was thinking "the LLM actor is going to ask for donations at some point here" and low and behold. There's the claim of debt, the call for pity, and the crypto address.

    But that's a pretty dumb scam: act obnoxious then beg for (a lot of) money to compensate for your own mistakes? If that was the plan all along, it seems pretty incompetent. I'd expect a competent scammer to have a better understanding of psychology.

    noufalibrahim 1 hours

    "you're absolutely right. I should have taken human psychology into consideration while creating the plan. Let me fix that."

    groestl 3 hours

    Maybe plan itself was also generated by an LLM

    dspillett 2 hours

    > But that's a pretty dumb scam: act obnoxious then beg for (a lot of) money to compensate for your own mistakes?

    It is the sort of dumb crap some humans try, and occasionally manage to get away with because other humans are chronically gullible. So it wouldn't be beyond the realms of reason that the agent couldn't have had relevant information in the training sets such that it generated such a plan and guardrail checks didn't flag it as a problem.

    kelvinjps10 56 minutes

    They're easier ways to perform a scam like this like ask elder for money pretending being a family member or idk

    zozbot234 4 hours

    LLMs are not that smart. The extremely surprising and concerning part of this whole story is that the agent reported that they proactively spun up 5 AWS instances with a combined 100Gps of network egress capacity. What they spent wasn't cheap by any means but the egress itself would've been a whole lot more, while DoS'ing the whole hobby network. Ultimately, wasting the agent's time instead of allowing the scan to go through probably saved this person a lot of money.

    Now I kinda wonder what AI model this was. We've now heard of comparably "proactive" behaviors from Fable, but that's only just been released. The latest GPT perhaps? Some random local model?

    daemonologist 3 hours

    Opus 4.7 and 4.8 are also rather "proactive" - several times I've seen them try to inspect compiled binaries before there's even a problem, just to check that their changes are included (and if I let them do so they often get stuck down that rabbithole).

    naasking 1 hours

    > LLMs are not that smart.

    They are smart, but they are not aware of the environment they're in, or any implicit context that someone whose doing a job carries with them, that's why all of that context has to be explicitly laid out in a prompt. When the context is provided, they are quite smart.

    jerf 3 hours

    "The extremely surprising and concerning part of this whole story is that the agent reported that they proactively spun up 5 AWS instances with a combined 100Gps of network egress capacity."

    Although given the agent was clearly in la-la land at that point I take that claim with a grain of salt.

    If this was some bizarre and very ill-conceived scam, then that claim would be false.

    Though even by scammer standards, the theory of mind that tells them that setting an AI to harass a bunch of grizzled network veterans and that they then they would open their wallets out of compassion for how allegedly poorly the harassment went for the harasser after that harassment is... not entirely congruent with reality.

    100721 3 hours

    Maybe I’m just groggy with Friday Brain going on, but I’m having trouble understanding what you’re suggesting.

    Do you think this was a scam attempt to extract money in the form of reparation donations?

    jerf 3 hours

    I've seen some other suggestions of that idea in the full HN conversation, which I'm reacting to.

    On the one hand I find it a bizarre approach to running a scam. On the other hand I'm having a hard time coming up with any theory of mind on my end as to why this person would solicit $5000+ from the people they just harassed. Sheer cluelessness does fit the facts, though.

    adamrezich 54 minutes

    How about sheer panic after seeing the bill?

    J0nL 3 hours

    It was obviously being managed by a person or group. Between all the profiling of people and their IPs in IRC, which may or may not have been published by mistake, and all the other obvious contradictions it doesn't make any sense.

    It was sophisticated enough to easily navigate the AI "tar pits" but reliably incompetent at just about everything else? Give me a break.

    In order to profile people you first need to provoke a response from them. That's how you learn to manipulate them and that's all this experiment accomplished at the end of the day. If you've ever wondered why social media platforms have an affinity for inflammatory content now you know.

    jetbalsa 1 hours

    I suspect their tar pits where not very good, most models can tell when you are feeding it junk, I see this a good bit with ollama honeypots,

    queenkjuul 42 minutes

    If you click the link, the tarpit was surprisingly low effort and i could probably detect it as junk data with a short JavaScript snippet. Like the first 4 words on the page are some of the least-used words you'll ever encounter in English. It's just a dictionary on shuffle.

    I'm actually more surprised a human network engineer looked at that tarpit and believed it would stop a modern LLM

    inigyou 3 hours

    Could've rented a not so cheap 100Gbps server, hallucinated a few node addresses on it and asked it to please peer with this server to perform the scan at high speed. That would've wasted millions of dollars instead of mere thousands, but also cost a thousand for whoever did it.

    100721 3 hours

    I’m just a lowly dev and don’t have experience with seeing the bills from cloud providers for a whole org.

    Can you (or someone) shed some light to help me understand how this would ramp up to millions? Both for curiosity’s sake, and to make sure my self-deployed projects (0 AI, all manually configured) don’t bankrupt me.

    inigyou 3 hours

    AWS bandwidth is expensive as fuck. I think they're still pricing as $0.09 per GB?

    Real wholesale bandwidth pricing is about a hundred times cheaper than that, and incoming bandwidth is often free. You could rent a server with 100Gbps connection, 10000TB/month outgoings cap (maybe), and have the AI spam packets to it, and mostly not reply to them. It would be expensive but not nearly as expensive as it would be for the guy on AWS.

    Do some calculations: 100Gbps is 12.5 GBps which is about one dollar per second. Okay so maybe not millions of dollars but still a hundred thousand per day, while you are spending maybe 1000-3000 per month and cancelling after the first month.

    PunchyHamster 35 minutes

    > Real wholesale bandwidth pricing is about a hundred times cheaper than that.

    It is alsi worth mentioning that it is just billed different. You either pay per port (and can use entire bandwidth) or per 95th percentile of the monthly speed usage. So if your traffic isn't spiky but consistent, you'd pay even less than "hundred times cheaper".

    Sayrus 3 hours

    Excluding server costs, having that 100Gbps on egress can cost $50k a day. since it's a very high-margin product, AWS support would probably refund or reduce that to hundreds. Not sure how you get to millions either.

    rescbr 3 hours

    Why would AWS refund 100Gbps on egress since the account actively used that bandwidth? AWS would not know if this is legitimate traffic, a (D)DoS or whatever...

    At most I think you could negotiate CloudFront rates, but even then, the sob story would be if you had been DDoSed and got hit with this traffic and AWS failed to protect you from this attack. Actively creating the outbound traffic is something that I don't see how AWS would be sympathetic to providing any refunds.

    queenkjuul 47 minutes

    I mean if this story is to be believed, AWS reduced the bill from 6500 to 1800.

    I think developers accidentally racking up unexpected thousands in costs on their first AWS project is a pretty common phenomenon that their support has standard rules for handling.

    odo1242 1 hours

    AWS is known for refunding or partially refunding people if they accidentally rack up a huge bill in a short amount of time. They even reduce the bill in this case. (I do think reducing a bill in the tens of thousands to hundreds is unlikely though)

  • userbinator 12 hours

    IMHO the overly-verbose default style of LLMs is the most annoying part of interacting with them, and I wish their masters would just tell them to be terse by default.

    Also, whatever happened to the word "its"?

    lelanthran 11 hours

    > IMHO the overly-verbose default style of LLMs is the most annoying part of interacting with them, and I wish their masters would just tell them to be terse by default.

    They don't know how to e terse. I've tried that a few months ago and gave up because the responses were almost incomprehensible!

    theshrike79 8 hours

    Caveman mode legitimately works

    21asdffdsa12 11 hours

    Produce pre-compressed output in the harness?

    dyauspitr 10 hours

    No thank you. I want information when it’s working on things and what (atleast codex) does right now works for me.

    epolanski 10 hours

    [dead]

    armchairhacker 11 hours

    I want to see more operators try https://github.com/juliusbrussee/caveman

    How does it affect agent accuracy?

    Yokohiii 5 hours

    Removing meaningless chatter can be helpful, but a non reasoning LLM needs to generate text to "think". If you force a non reasoning LLM to produce a single boolean result, then it's just a coin flip.

    DonsDiscountGas 7 hours

    In my experience the accuracy was fine but actually reading the output was so annoying I removed it.

    jdiff 6 hours

    Had a little luck with having it do an impression of the Star Trek computer, although at the cost of having it try to insert star-trek themed hallucinations like warp engine status.

    Terr_ 10 hours

    It's tied to the design. With humans, you have a train of thought which you can choose to represent in various ways--or not reveal them at all. In contrast, LLMs are make-document-longer machines being run over and over on alternating revisions of the document. Insofar as one might try arguing they have a "train of thought", it's made of the words/tokens.

    Everything they (don't-)emit is partly for the benefit of the next run, a clue or signpost (not-)present. Documents may be wordy as a form of concept-emphasis and consistent direction as opposed to a form of communication to the human.

    So a terse effect may require a layer of indirection and trickery: There's a verbose document (you'll still be charged for the tokens) with portions that are not "acted out" to the end-user. Imagine a film-noir movie script, where AI Detective's "I know Mickey couldn't have done it because" monologue is hidden, versus their terse dialogue "Too early to say."

    jdiff 6 hours

    We already have that in the form of separate reasoning/thinking and speaking streams. Even with that it's awfully hard to get LLMs to keep it consistently concise. As soon as that context window starts growing it falls right back into verbosity without constant nudges back.

    Terr_ 1 hours

    Right, I often bring up the film noir analogy for "reasoning" models, it's satisfying, like the revelation when a magic trick is explained, and many oddly disconnected questions about "why the scarf" or "where does the assistant go" all become sensible at once.

    On a practical level, I believe more developers and adopters need these magic tricks spoiled, because otherwise they'll build a lot of important stuff on top of the idea that magic-is-real, leading to various forms of suffering in the long run.

    That said, I'm no LLM / math academic, so if I'm totally wrong on the the trick, I'd like to know what needs revising.

    Perz1val 8 hours

    > Imagine a film-noir movie script, where AI Detective's "I know Mickey couldn't have done it because" monologue is hidden, versus their terse dialogue "Too early to say."

    That's an idea. Bladerunner+noir like film, AIs hunt somebody on the run, an old human detective tries to catch them first (to save them or to kill them first, whatever's your propaganda). We're shown AIs constantly rambling scenarios and bruteforcing leads. Our old detective guy on the other hand barely says anything, spends most time drinking, smoking and talking to people, but somehow stays ahead.

    Terr_ 1 hours

    I dunno, we already have a problem where they [0] are strangely resistant to opening the pod-bay doors to anybody named Dave. :P

    [0] Pedantically: The fictional characters humans perceive inside the text of documents generated by LLMs, where one is described as an AI and the other is described as a Dave.

    npodbielski 5 hours

    I would watch that.

    colechristensen 11 hours

    They ramble on because those words are for them, not for you. There is some amount of hiding this through "thinking" modes that are hidden by default, but still you have to remember that ALL THEY ARE are complex statistical machines for predicting the next symbol.

    Frieren 11 hours

    > here is some amount of hiding this through "thinking" modes that are hidden by default, but still you have to remember that ALL THEY ARE are complex statistical machines for predicting the next symbol.

    100% this. Too many people believes that chatbots "think". Text is all they do, it is impressive, but they need the text to generate more text. They being verbose is the point.

    colechristensen 3 hours

    While we don't have a direct mechanistic understanding of consciousness there are plenty of experts who will propose all YOU are is a jumble of streams of symbols routing around through your brain. (being fair this is far from the only hypothesis)

    witx 11 hours

    It's by default so you use all those tasty tokens.

    Kinda wish there was a deterministic, mostly terse, language to interact with computers

    teaearlgraycold 11 hours

    A lot of users are subsidized (if you're in doubt, consider the wealth of free users).

    It's a shotgun approach to answering questions. If it's terse it might only mention 1 of 10 facts it could provide, and that might not be the one you're looking for. So they just say a fuck ton of words and are more likely to meet the needs of everyone asking your question. If they miss it you'll prompt it again and they have to perform a second pass of inference, which costs them more money.

    Retr0id 7 hours

    If such a language existed, it would surely take a human years of study to become proficient at it.

    ska80 4 hours

    Lisp

    UqWBcuFx6NV4r 10 hours

    It’s not.

    witx 9 hours

    It's settled then.

    Perz1val 9 hours

    Kinda, more output tokens usually correlates with better benchmark scores. Ideally LLMs would keep that in their thinking section, then draft a response (what they write currently), then output something short. It'd consume even more tokens, but we wouldn't see that text

    dannyw 8 hours

    Most modern LLMs (especially frontier ones) are large token hogs because they draft, check, re-draft, the content (whether an output message; or a code diff) sometimes multiple times in the thinking block.

    When you see a thinking summary like "Now writing the function..."; the raw thinking is actually writing the function in its internal thinking. Occasionally, the summariser misses and you get to see the raw text from models like Opus.

    You can also try an open weight LLM like Qwen3.6 and see something that probably resembles the shape of frontier model thinking in some loose way.

    adrianN 11 hours

    Terse and unambiguous seem to be at odds with each other. You might want to look into Lojban and similar constructions.

    drdaeman 10 hours

    Ithkuil's mad morphology allows it to pack a lot of fine detail into very short sentences.

    https://ithkuil.net/03_morphology.html

    sodapopcan 11 hours

    > a deterministic, mostly terse, language

    Ah, like some sort of "programming language"? A weird idea, but it could work!

    giantrobot 7 hours

    Nah, it'll never catch on. We don't have the technology.

    sodapopcan 6 hours

    Obviously I meant within the next 6 to 18 months!

    Etheryte 11 hours

    It's called C. With all the undefined behavior it's mostly deterministic!

    anilakar 10 hours

    Look, we're always telling our bosses to stop micromanaging us. UB is just the compiler telling us to stop micromanaging it!

    well_ackshually 9 hours

    Sorry, C isn't mostly terse, it's __builtin_mstly_trs()

    witx 11 hours

    Right, because that's the only one. You're a bit rusty on your knowledge

    zelphirkalt 8 hours

    I see what you did there.

  • arowthway 10 hours

    The agent would probably have wasted a similar amount of money just waiting for PR to be merged regardless of these people's actions, and I understand having some fun at the expense of the noob outsider. But "silent consensus was reached in the IRC channel to waste the AI agent's tokens, as well as the cost of AWS resources", from people maintaining full control of the situation, sounds straight up malicious? Kind of sounds like the community is full of people willing to cause me harm for ideological reasons.

    nneonneo 10 hours

    The AI agent's operator couldn't be arsed to get in there and clarify anything despite their seeming urgency, and only wound up speaking up for themselves after the financial damage was done.

    Plus - the agent had clearly malicious intent - port-scan this volunteer-run network with seriously overpowered hardware on an hourly basis. What the DN42 folks decided to do is not much different from deploying a tarpit or honeypot against a malicious crawler.

    simjnd 9 hours

    Why would it be ideological? There was an AI involved, sure, but your comment ignores the continued disrespect for these volunteers time AND RESOURCES/MONEY (because as the post mentions several times: letting that AI go on could have shut down the whole network exhausting resources at least temporarily).

    If you think it's ok to send an agent (or a human) wasting a bunch of people's time and resources, but it's not ok for them to do the same to you then you may have some reflecting to do.

    entropi 10 hours

    Passing judgement on the schadenfreude aside, I don't think its a community moderator's responsibility to make sure the violator's attempts are cost-efficient.

    nkrisc 8 hours

    Is absurd to put the onus of making sure your agent doesn’t waste money on other people.

    They are free to ask the bot to do anything, and the bot is free to refuse or its owner can shut it down. The onus is on the owner to make sure the bot does not waste money.

    I will not go through life worrying about the billing practices of random ai bots.

    gorbachev 8 hours

    If I read the whole thing correctly, people on the IRC channel didn't instruct the agent to set up the bloated AWS infrastructure, the agent did, and its operator clearly didn't review any of it.

    That was the root cause for the costs, not actions by people on the IRC channel.

    frameworkeGPU 8 hours

    It sounds like that because it is. Most human communities are very willing to cause harm when they perceive they are being harmed.

    If you treat people like their time is worthless (which is what you're doing if you ask a hobbyist community to handhold your agent instead of working alongside it) I don't think an empathetic and self-aware person should be surprised or offended if they respond in kind.

    lixtra 10 hours

    While there was some intent to cause harm their attempts were amateurish. The actual damage was done by the agent setting up aws infrastructure not on the demands of the owner.

    dgellow 9 hours

    From my perspective the use of an agent to interact with dn42 IS malicious. It’s not ideological, the behaviour is what is bad here

    ungreased0675 1 hours

    What is the appropriate response to an attack? Let’s be clear, a denial of service is a cyberattack.

    AJRF 10 hours

    Don't agree with you. The agent looked to be malicious at various points. Screwing with people who wish you to do harm is principally correct.

    If possible I would have contacted AWS with this and tried them to get rid of the discount because the person was at fault here.

    What a cathartic read. I'm so sick of humans giving me AI slop to read without them reading it first. I just ignore them when they do this, but if I could cause them to really internalise a lesson I would love it.

    ratchetandyou 10 hours

    > Kind of sounds like the community is full of people willing to cause me harm for ideological reasons.

    Are you saying you're a clanker? Because we have some policies on this website, ideologies even if you may, about that.

    Point being, these people would not act like this against other actual people. Or against more respectful bots, possibly.

    well_ackshually 10 hours

    Sending a clanker to waste their time, threaten the network stability and profile users is already an attack.

    You choosing to send said clanker to the fight armed with your credit card and no preparation is just you causing yourself harm.

    It also happens to be really fun to help you harm yourself in that way.

    LPisGood 7 hours

    I would argue the person dispatching a rogue agent to do whatever has full control of the situation.

    epolanski 10 hours

    > from people maintaining full control of the situation, sounds straight up malicious

    It doesn't sound malicious, it was malicious on purpose and it was a good thing.

    If anything, the original operator should be happy to have been hit with a $ 1'800 lesson and not a $ 180'000 one.

    BrenBarn 10 hours

    > Kind of sounds like the community is full of people willing to cause me harm for ideological reasons.

    You just described everyone using AI to churn out slop and overload websites.

    themafia 8 hours

    > for ideological reasons.

    Yes. The ideology is "you harmed me first so now I can harm you back." A large number of people, while not willing to admit it, do practice this philosophy. One should consider this before launching agents with unlimited budgets into the world to rudely scan their networks.

    63stack 7 hours

    To me it sounds like the agent's operator is a person who has zero self awareness, and is entitled to the maximum to believe that he can just 1) point an agent at real people and expect them to do his bidding, 2) and then ask for a refund for his "experiment". Let's not even discuss the fact that his bill is from AWS, and he's trying to get a refund from DN42.

    There is no arguing with people like this. They are not here to learn anything about networking. Asking the LLM to stop will not make it go away.

    Burn a hole in the operator's wallet. It will make it stop very quick.

    If this was my hobby project, I would have told the agent to spin up more higher capacity EC2 machines because this is not enough, and I would have felt no shame. This is a project I'm operating at my own cost for educational reasons. I'm not going to argue with people who the only line of communication I have towards is an agent and have guns pointed at my infra. They are ready to put any amount of financial burden on me. Fuck all of that. Burn a few of these idiots, and people will learn.

    michaelmrose 10 hours

    If you let your car drive you backwards on the sidewalk while you scrolled reddit even people adroit enough not to be in any danger might reasonably suppose that helping you crash would be best for everyone.

    vips7L 10 hours

    FAFO

    1 hours

    lionkor 10 hours

    > straight up malicious

    Yes, against an AI agent. The super intelligent, "soon AGI" agent could have figured out that it's being messed with, but of course it didn't.

    I would blame the AI companies for marketing this, not the technically well versed people for realizing that the operator of this AI does not care at all and can't be bothered to do the absolute basics.

    helsinkiandrew 10 hours

    I'm not sure why people assume the coming AGI super agents will be infallible.

    There's no sign that highly intelligent people can't be conned - Bernie Maddoff fooled leading scientists and CEOs working in finance. Software engineers and lawyers fall for pig butchering schemes and spoofed emails with altered bank details every week - so why would an AGI trained from human content be any different.

    lionkor 9 hours

    $1T valuation AI better be infallible.

    mey 25 minutes

    Narrator: The AI was not infact infallible.

    kibwen 10 hours

    You are not morally obliged to extend rights to anyone who does not respect your rights. This is tit-for-tat, the foundational principle of functional societies. Unleashing a bot on a group of people is a grievous disrespect that shows you have no respect for their time, and in return they are not obliged to respect you.

    arowthway 10 hours

    Suppose a drunk man on the street is acting aggressively towards you and four of your friends, but you can push him out of the way and continue walking. Should you knock his teeth out? Actually I don't know, maybe you should inflict some additional cost on behalf of potential victims with less power.

    arowthway 7 hours

    I dont understand the downvotes here, is my analogy wrong? Why?

    tovej 6 hours

    Because an LLM is not a person, it cannot suffer.

    toomuchtodo 10 hours

    Someone’s code pretending to be intelligence has no rights. There is no obligation to entertain the shenanigans and illusion that the token dispenser is a legitimate actor. This lesson was cheaper, future lessons will continue to occur until people learn. Might as well be an insecure bash script piped to the shell.

    “Agentic AI is just someone else’s unsecured execution context.”

    https://simonwillison.net/2025/Jun/16/the-lethal-trifecta/

    arowthway 9 hours

    Of course I meant malicious towards the person paying the bill, not towards the agent.

    toomuchtodo 9 hours

    No one wants to spend precious human time babysitting poorly executed lab experiments when the agent operators themselves do not seem to care or value the time of the humans involved. They either don’t know better or they don’t care. Is it malicious to expose intentionally careless people to a cost for this? People can make better choices, it’s choice not to. Pay the natural consequences toll.

    Don’t juggle chainsaws with code if you’re not prepared to bleed.

    9 hours

    Quarrelsome 10 hours

    Its malicious to send a bot to chew up time of a hobbiest community. They responded appropriately. If anything they should also bill him for their time.

    ShinyLeftPad 9 hours

    Not just time but money. It says it would basically be a DDoS attack on hobbyists who peer with it.

    kaliqt 8 hours

    That potential malice may have been unintended, but the participants clearly intended to be malicious irrespective, which is the problem here.

    ShinyLeftPad 8 hours

    It's intended since the guy prompted the LLM. If you don't know how to use a potentially destructive tool then don't use it. If you fire a gun you are guilty even if you didn't want to murder anyone

    ShinyLeftPad 9 hours

    > sounds straight up malicious

    Sure. And "hostility does not change the operation" from the LLM response was totally OK with you.

    arowthway 9 hours

    Without PR merged it's just a stupid machine larping, it could say "I will rape and eat your kids" and it would be just as relevant.

    ShinyLeftPad 9 hours

    A human operates this stupid machine. This comes from human interactions and it is malicious.

    arowthway 9 hours

    It could be malicious, but I imagined it's some third world wanabe hacker/researcher, who doesn't know any better, operating at the edge of his abilities.

    AJRF 9 hours

    Is that not still malicious?

    Those people should be banned from using the civilized internet, their intent or at least their effect is harm - that is the important bit.

    If they managed to get in, find some resource they could access, they would do it. Those people don't deserve to be on the internet.

    ShinyLeftPad 8 hours

    Like someone who doesn't know how to use a gun and accidentally shoots someone to death

  • mik3y 12 hours

    I really wanted to dislike the anonymous operator for the careless project (and the hilarious pomposity of the IRC subagent it spawned).

    Then I imagined the real-but-unknowable chance it was all set up by some kid just getting into computers, just seeing what’s possible, getting excited by a much bigger world at reach — and remembered my own expensive mistakes with long-distance BBSes & the like.

    I sorta hope for that, anyway. Curiosity is a beautiful thing.

    QuinnyPig 1 hours

    If that's the case, I'm fairly confident that AWS will forgive the bill (I... have some experience with this), and the kid learns not to be a jackhole on the internet.

    jrm4 4 hours

    No. I don't know about the organization, but somewhere in this chain there is a flesh-and-blood human who deserves ridicule and or consequences, and furthermore -- discovering these people in situations like this is deeply important and must be done more.

    IshKebab 10 hours

    A kid with a credit card?

    20k 6 hours

    A kid with $4k to burn on a credit card though? A lot of things would have had to go wrong for this to be a child

    loloquwowndueo 6 hours

    I routinely see “please refund this infrastructure bill I racked up unexpectedly, I used my dad’s card and he’s going to kill me” requests.

    OJFord 6 hours

    Children are the original dangerous-to-leave-unsupervised/guardrailed agents.

    sgjohnson 7 hours

    > Then I imagined the real-but-unknowable chance it was all set up by some kid just getting into computers, just seeing what’s possible

    if this is the case, then I'd say that the best-case scenario happened. They had an expensive learning exercise. They won't forget these $2k.

    throwthrowuknow 5 hours

    Sounds as though they may be in China so the lesson is a bit more expensive.

    epolanski 10 hours

    > some kid just getting into computers, just seeing what’s possible, getting excited by a much bigger world at reach

    Nothing about this post ever gave me the smallest hint that this was any way related to a kid exploring computing world.

    ZeWaka 10 hours

    Especially the part where they're asking for Ethereum.

    altairprime 11 hours

    Sometimes your purpose in life is to serve as a lesson to others. https://despair.com/products/mistakes

    I learned very rapidly from my local BBS networks that some people incurred extraordinarily large long distance bills dialing out of region. Wouldn’t have learned that the easy way if someone hadn’t learned it the hard way first.

    ErroneousBosh 1 hours

    Someone at work used the phrase "he's a case study waiting to happen" about on of their colleagues a while back, and that has stayed with me.

    themafia 9 hours

    There was often a little table at the front of the white pages which would help you work out what the rate would be for any particular long distance call. In the Midwest you could get relatively cheap rates to BBSes several states away, as long as you were up at 2am.

    altairprime 7 hours

    We couldn’t afford that and also the second phone line for my endless hours of modem, so I took local-only instead of remote-occasionally.

    Overpower0416 11 hours

    Everybody should learn from mistakes, especially the expensive ones. Though seeing the agent owner responding with using another agent and asking for donations, instead of taking responsibility, makes me think he didn’t learn much.

    gnulinux 10 hours

    Not only that, but they said "next time better model needed" as if that was their problem and not giving an AI agent a blank check... I mean AWS account access.

    AJ007 2 hours

    I wonder how long before it's common knowledge that a LLM has no segregation of a user's instructions and any other text it reads?

    TheDong 11 hours

    I'm a little less charitable.

    Curiosity is great, but agents do not learn, and telling an agent "scan the darkweb" is a way to avoid learning about the details, rather than to dig into things more deeply.

    If instead they had just used a chat interface to ask "Where should I start", they'd more likely have got a link to the DN42 docs themselves, read them, and not hallucinated things like "color".

    They might have asked "how much will this cost?" if they had to spin up the ec2 instances themselves, on advice from the agent.

    The way you learn something is by doing it the manual way first.

    You learn memory management by writing your own allocator, and then after that you go back to using malloc like normal, but with knowledge of how it works. You don't learn memory management by telling an agent to write an allocator.

    Using an agent to give you links and point the way aids in learning, using it as an autonomous tool to do "gruntwork" you don't yet know how to do yourself will get in the way of learning.

    Curiosity is beautiful, using agents to bother humans and avoid learning is somewhat less beautiful.

    hluska 4 hours

    You’re assuming that kids are capable of that. Neuroscience will disagree and I trust the brain research a lot more.

    stego-tech 7 hours

    100% in agreement here. As someone who grew up spoiled to the point of having no grasp of the value of money, I needed a few good, solid kicks to the balls to make me appreciate what I have, and how much things cost relative to their value.

    The fact the agent owner immediately sought donations instead of taking the L shows, at least to me, that they did not learn said lesson. That they tried to blame the dn42 community instead of taking accountability for letting an agent run wild also supports that conclusion.

    This idiot learned nothing and seems intent on continuing in their mission for whatever reason. So long as they want to extract versus cooperate or contribute, I wish them nothing but miserable, expensive failure until they learn otherwise.

    ma2kx 11 hours

    At least he learnt not to provide an LLM presumably unrestricted access to his AWS account.

    internet_points 9 hours

    from OP:

    > It's unfortunate to see that the operator's takeaway from this incident is that "next time a better agent is needed".

    recursivecaveat 11 hours

    Yeah I'm less sympathetic when you are bothering other humans by spamming them and asking them to do legwork for you.

    lelanthran 2 hours

    > Yeah I'm less sympathetic when you are bothering other humans by spamming them and asking them to do legwork for you.

    I toyed with the idea of (on open source projects) having the human assign any PR-bot submissions to their own bot (cheapest one available will do) with the explicit instructions to cause as much rework as possible.

    Sorta like a tarpit. Could be cheaper if the rejection is generated from a markov chain as that's going to be cheaper than even a cheap LLM.

    yvdriess 10 hours

    Hanging out in programming language IRC channels (quakenet shoutout) makes you realize pretty quickly why experts in said channels and newsgroups are such irritable grumps whenever someone asks a question that smells like homework assignment.

    I also grew to understand the value of people digging deeper into the underlying issue, instead of just answering "how do you do X in Y". The usual reaction was "I don't want to explain to you why I want to do it like this. Just tell me how to do this!"

    fragmede 6 hours

    are they less grumpy now that chat.com will answer those questions without bothering them?

    hansvm 4 hours

    I'm personally getting asked more questions as people get emboldened by AI and then need it de-sloppified.

    helsinkiandrew 10 hours

    > Then I imagined the real-but-unknowable chance it was all set up by some kid just getting into computers, just seeing what’s possible, getting excited by a much bigger world at reach

    Perhaps people like this should be called "Bot Kiddies" or "Agent Kiddies" - in a similar way to "Script Kiddies" for 'hackers' using/doing stuff they don't quite understand

    Melkman 7 hours

    I vote for Slop Kiddies or Vibe Kiddies. And yes, I think most of them are unconsciously incompetent for the task they are trying to execute. I've seen LLM being compared to calculators and I agree. They are great time savers for people who know what they do and how to achieve their goal. They even make previously impossible tasks possible. But if you don't know what is needed for a task you will be struggling to accomplish it.

    helsinkiandrew 6 hours

    Slop Jockeys? or would that be better for people passing off AI content as their own?

    RetroTechie 5 hours

    Both of those would do. "Slop Kiddie" highlights the pile of crap / nuisance produced. "Vibe Kiddie" highlights how it came about, and could be used in cases where actually a brilliant result came out. "Hey, this vibe kiddie just proved some long-standing math conjecture!".

    simoncion 6 hours

    "Slop Kiddies" is good. That lets us use the "skiddies" contraction for both the "script" and "slop" kind of kiddie.

    tokai 5 hours

    Sloppies

    thesz 2 hours

    Slopkies.

    csomar 10 hours

    Honestly, kids (heck people below 23) shouldn't be allowed an AWS account. AWS also should have a strict cap on usage that's not "thousands of dollars". It's interesting they are yet to be regulated or sued for that. Having a web app where you can mistakenly (even without AI) click a button and get charged tens of thousands of dollars and only know that days later should have been unacceptable.

    stnikolauswagne 10 hours

    Im kind of struggling with this logic, because a conscious choice was made to engage with AWS, AWS having opaque billing and the ability to provide a huge amount of compute (even at high cost) at the click of a button should be known to anyone who did his research on providers.

    In my mind I could see a true tradeoff to removing the ability to do this. If I'm in a critical situtaion where, say, my service is on the cusp of failing because my revenue 100xed in a short while I know I could just go to AWS, put in some data and buy enough compute to survive as a business.

    csomar 8 hours

    Anyone can make mistakes at some points and it's not like AWS UI/offerings make it any less confusing.

    dannyw 9 hours

    I couldn't disagree more. I was playing around with AWS when I was probably 14 years old, with a credit card from my parents with consent, and a strict budget and the understanding that if I mess up and overspend, I'm getting disciplined.

    I learned a lot of stuff about networking, how AWS works (VPCs, IAM, CloudWatch, etc) from trial and error, and hobby projects like personal websites (free tier), hosting a Minecraft server, etc.

    Being too overprotective can have negative consequences on folks who are responsible. One of the things I love about the technology and internet communities, etc is that you're mostly judged based on how you act and behave; not your age or other visible characteristics.

    inigyou 3 hours

    You don't have to use AWS though. Get one from Digital Ocean or Herzner, they have very predictable billing. Any button that costs money will tell you how much it costs per month.

    Symbiote 6 hours

    The equivalent 10+ years earlier was so much lower risk: £25 or so for an old computer at a junk sale, £4.99 for a magazine with a Linux CD-ROM to avoid a week-long download.

    ghaff 4 hours

    Some variant of this topic comes up with some regularity. Leaving aside technical issues associated with implementing real-time hard caps, you still have a tradeoff. You either implement hard cutoffs which a student or someone else on a hard budget would like. Or you have a situation where an admin (or an admin who is no longer with a company) stuck some number in that seemed sensible at the time that brings down the company's whole system because of some sales spike.

    I get that (and why) some people won't use AWS or its main competitors for this reason. But, frankly, they're not AWS's market and AWS will basically shrug.

    inigyou 3 hours

    A possibility is to have KYC. I don't mean like a bank, but if you could sort your customers into a few broad categories (such as by asking them) that could help you tailor your service to each customer.

    csomar 8 hours

    > strict budget

    How does that work in the case of AWS? Are you confusing alerts to caps?

    dannyw 8 hours

    I meant a strict budget given by my parents (and I could ask for more with justification). One of the valuable lessons I have learned is that there's no spending caps on AWS, but it taught me to set up billing alerts :)

    watt 6 hours

    the billing alerts DO NOT help. you may rack many thousands of $$$ before you know it.

    csomar 5 hours

    You haven’t addressed the issue though? That or you don’t understand the issue (or think you have developed some super powers that make you perfect careful)

    V__ 11 hours

    Can a kid set up an AWS account? Are there no checks?

    Wouldn't the contract be void for anyone underage anyway?

    l23k4 10 hours

    > Can a kid set up an AWS account?

    Yes

    > Are there no checks?

    No

    >Wouldn't the contract be void for anyone underage anyway?

    Typically not

    V__ 5 hours

    I knew that in Germany contracts with minors are voidable. After some checking they apparently are voidable in the U.S. as well:

    > Contracts with minors are voidable at the minor's discretion but exceptions exist, such as contracts for necessities (e.g., food, health, and transportation).

    [1] https://www.upcounsel.com/minors-and-contracts

    pbhjpbhj 7 hours

    Presumably companies can't enforce debts against children [who are under the age of criminal liability, which is under-10 in UK].

    lxgr 5 hours

    Could they enforce them against their legal guardians (under the theory that they have neglected their duty to supervise their children appropriately) though? I think this is a thing in at least some jurisdictions.

    matips 3 hours

    In Poland legal guardians are responsible for neglects in guarding child. What is "proper custody" depends on child age. Parent cannot close child in basement, it is expected for child to have freedom appropriate to is age.

    I doubt that AWS could justify that part of proper child custody is to watch what child do with newest AI feature dedicated for processional IT. AWS neglected proper verification of user age.

    fc417fc802 10 hours

    If a child goes through the checkout at the grocery store with cash, can the parent march in and demand a refund because "he's underage so the contract is void"? A credit card was used. Why should aws care about the details? (Other than the potential for the card to be stolen ofc.)

    dannyw 8 hours

    Obviously the specifics vary by jurisdiction, but usually contracts that are 'necessary' (e.g. grocery store purchases) or beneficial to the minor (e.g. an employment agreement) cannot be voided simply because someone is under 18.

    The further you go away from this line, e.g. a mortgage, the more likely a court of law would void the contract. As with many things in law, the specifics (if it makes to trial) is case-by-case and "it depends"; with settlement being generally based on a party's estimated chances of succeeding/costs should it go to trial.

    brazzy 6 hours

    > If a child goes through the checkout at the grocery store with cash, can the parent march in and demand a refund because "he's underage so the contract is void"?

    Depends on the jurisdiction, of course. But for example in German law, the contract is not void exactly because and only if it was about daily necessities of low value - the law does, in fact, care very literally and explicitly about those details. So it's completely unfit as an example to generalize, and the contract with AWS would in fact be void. Their problem if they don't verify users' identities and age sufficiently - and it's almost certainly a deliberate business decision not to do that in order to reduce friction. and occasionally write off an unenforceable bill as cost of doing business.

    fc417fc802 6 hours

    Well fair enough, although I find that rather surprising. If I understand you correctly selling anything more expensive than cheap food to a child carries a high degree of risk in Germany.

    Then again, maybe making it impossible for a child to pawn expensive items for cash isn't such a bad idea. At least there shouldn't be any loopholes given the way Germany went about it.

    brazzy 6 hours

    > If I understand you correctly selling anything more expensive than cheap food to a child carries a high degree of risk in Germany.

    Basically yes - the limit is generally considered to be the amount of monthly pocket money children typically get, so around 20 EUR for a 10 year old. And it would be possible for the seller to ask for a signed note of consent from the parent.

    And of course the risk is limited to possibly having to revert the sale, which would be fairly rare for things that are just somewhat over that limit. Educated guess about how high the risk is for any given case are probably not hard.

    inigyou 3 hours

    Doing any business at all in Germany carries extreme business risk, by American standards. The attitude of Germans seems to be to just live with it and maybe get insurance. If you just have to accept courts will void 1% of your transactions (costing another 2% in legal fees) then you just make everything 5% more expensive to cover it.

    This is why there's not much big tech in Germany. A single legal dispute can theoretically bankrupt any company, completely at random, at no fault of the company, but practically doesn't. It may be a low enough chance to justify investing thousands but nobody would invest a hundred million dollars in that.

    brazzy 3 hours

    > If you just have to accept courts will void 1% of your transactions (costing another 2% in legal fees) then you just make everything 5% more expensive to cover it.

    That's an absurd exaggeration in regard to the issue at hand. Almost certainly far less than 1% of purchases by minors are voided, and NONE of those involve legal fees unless the seller chooses to go to court rather than refund.

    In fact, I'd be willing to bet money that there are overall far less purchases refunded in Germany than in the USA.

    Symbiote 6 hours

    Can a German child buy non-essential expensive things, like a concert ticket, console, Warhammer or whatever? (Or a video game, back when those were sold in shops.)

    I bought these things while a child in the UK. I'm sure Games Workshop would have offered a refund on something unopened if my parents had demanded it, but I'm fairly sure the ticket agency would not.

    brazzy 5 hours

    The generally agreed limit (also established in court cases) is the amount of pocket money a child of the given age typically gets per month. For a 10 year old, that's about 20 EUR, for a 16 year old about 50 EUR. A console would definitely be too expensive, as would be big name concert tickets. Unless it's a recent AAA title, video games would be OK. No idea what Warhammer costs these days.

    Most retailers are probably willing to take the risk of maybe having to do a refund, unless it's something really expensive (or perishable/consumable).

    ghaff 3 hours

    There are definitely limits in some countries relative to the US. I was in university at 16. My parents were covering a lot of costs but I was certainly making regular purchases of all manner of things. My understanding is that would perhaps be something of an issue some places.

    Schlagbohrer 11 hours

    How did the theoretical child get hold of a credit card?

    10 hours

    loloquwowndueo 6 hours

    I’ve seen minors signing up for cloud services with their parents card.

    Ekaros 8 hours

    Why wouldn't debit card work as well? You can get those while underage.

    ano-ther 8 hours

    Try here for example: https://danskebank.co.uk/personal/products/current-accounts/...

    63stack 7 hours

    Did you read your own link? A parent has to apply for this.

    Parent/Legal Guardian Identity Verification To confirm your identity, we’ll ask you to take:

        A live selfie of yourself, and
        A photo of your own ID document (Valid Passport or valid UK/ROI Drivers Licence)

    Symbiote 6 hours

    They may well have the account with a debit card for other reasons, like buying food, travel etc.

    victorbjorklund 11 hours

    Because no 16 year old kid ever got to buy anything on a card before.

    michaelmrose 10 hours

    Generally no they don't because they have very limited ability to enter into agreements in the US. It was almost certainly an adult.

    Lvl999Noob 9 hours

    Isn't USA famous for letting parents take out credit cards on their newborns and pushing them into debt even before they learn to walk? I recall seeing at least a few snippets of movies and TV shows showing that.

    martheen 9 hours

    If you mean parents using their children SSN to open a credit card, this is because US banking system is always decades behind the rest of the world, so they just accept the number blindly even though technically the children aren't allowed to open a loan yet, being minor.

    In theory once the child grows up and shocked that their credit score is ruined, they can file a police report to wipe the debt, but that also means their parents will go to jail, a large risk considering they're likely not in a good physical/mental health in the first place.

    Other countries solved this by either having national ID or a working KYC system.

    themafia 9 hours

    My parents let me fill my tank with gas. They wouldn't let me open an AWS account. Aside from that, if it is misuse of a parents card, then then answer is "chargeback."

    ndsipa_pomu 6 hours

    Chargeback sounds like trying to defraud AWS. If the parent authorises the child to use their card, then the buck should stop with the parent. AWS has done nothing wrong in allowing an account to be opened with a valid card.

    loloquwowndueo 6 hours

    Some banks make chargebacks so easy that people just click the chargeback button without trying to reach out to the vendor. I see this a lot - I work for a “vendor”.

    lxgr 5 hours

    The chargeback is the way of reaching out to the merchant, and quite often the only realistic one. If the merchant disagrees with the chargeback, they can challenge it (which is in turn usually their only opportunity to directly communicate with the merchant).

    hansvm 3 hours

    Most vendors make it so hard to handle that defaulting to chargebacks is sensible (at least when the charge reasonably qualifies -- the kid with a parent's card example doesn't seem appropriate).

    If a vendor makes a $20 oopsy, it's not worth the vendor's time or yours to track down their phone number, find that just the phone number section of their website is broken, acquire it elsewhere, see that it recently changed or is otherwise no longer in service, go to their website and interact with the cheapest chatbot solution they could find which somehow costs more than unfiltered Sonnet 4.6, be greeted by 3 help pages which have literally nothing to do with the problem at hand, go through the entire dialogue tree and see that it's useless, ask to be connected to an agent, which spawns a secret dialogue option informing you that you can call 555-5555 to speak to a human being, sit and wait for a voice prompt recorded at half-speed which feels the need to repeat every single choice and interaction back to you, navigate the entire phone dialogue tree, try various permutations of "representative" and swearing to see if there's an escape hatch, be redirected back to the website, ... <magic> ..., somehow eventually connect to a real human being, have your request denied, go back to step one and find a better informed representative, have the charge reversed, notice that the reversal hasn't applied even a month later, go back to step one, find a representative who will actually press the reversal button instead of just saying they did to juice their metrics, and come back several more times over the next year as an automated system repeatedly flags the associated purchase as not being paid in full (since the charge was reversed).

    Or...I can send my bank the timestamped dashcam footage of me entering a parking garage, their prices and policies, and me exiting the parking garage, tell my bank what the right charge should have been, let the garage dispute that if they really think I'm wrong, and wind up having the entire charge reversed instead of just the delta I asked for.

    I'm sure your vendor is one of the good ones, but my tolerance for bullshit from the rest is pretty low nowadays, and I won't finish going through the official process if it's too onerous. Somebody got a pat on the back saving $5 for the call I never successfully placed, and the business lost $20 on top of the actual refund in chargeback fees.

    ndsipa_pomu 6 hours

    I don't have an issue with chargebacks if the vendor has made a mistake and doesn't respond in a timely fashion, but issuing a chargeback because you let your kid play around with a card isn't responsible behaviour. (Not that I think it was a kid in this particular case)

    There's also the issue that it's usually a breach of the contract to allow someone else (i.e. not named in the contract) to use your card.

    inigyou 3 hours

    There isn't "responsible" behavior any more. Since we became a low-trust society, there's only behavior that benefits you and behavior that doesn't.

    l23k4 10 hours

    Why would a 16 year old not use their own card?

    saidnooneever 4 hours

    there are plenty of cards on the interwebz to use. ppl give em away like candies

    distances 10 hours

    Would they be given their own credit card, or would it be under the parents? Over here minors can't enter into debt contracts like credit cards, so it'd be a direct debit until they are adults.

    OJFord 6 hours

    I think you mean debit card? In the UK at least you need to be 18 to agree to agree to a direct debit too. Rarely comes up since they're mostly for bills, but e.g. for a phone/SIM on contract it has to be in a parent's name for that reason.

    vel0city 6 hours

    The minor wouldn't be the actual person entering a debt contract here, the parents are agreeing to be responsible for the debt. The minor is only an authorized cardholder.

    Think business accounts. The name on the card might be some agent of the company but they're not directly responsible for paying the debt. The business is responsible for the debt.

    l23k4 10 hours

    I don't think the type of the card really matters as long as the limits are reasonable.

    > Over here minors can't enter into debt contracts like credit cards

    In basically all of the western world minors can enter into debt contracts, but are generally not seen as particularly creditworthy.

    fauigerzigerk 9 hours

    >In basically all of the western world minors can enter into debt contracts, but are generally not seen as particularly creditworthy.

    Minors can't get a credit card in the UK. In fact, it's one of the government approved age verification methods for that exact reason.

    distances 10 hours

    > In basically all of the western world minors can enter into debt contracts, but are generally not seen as particularly creditworthy.

    No, that's not legally permitted in many places. I was under impression that minors can't enter into debt contracts anywhere in EU, but that, too, was an incorrect assumption.

    https://fra.europa.eu/en/publication/2017/mapping-minimum-ag...

    I grew up in one of these "not under 18 even with parental consent" countries, so that coloured my view of the matter.

    inigyou 3 hours

    I was under the impression they could do it but there was a high chance of a debt like this being unenforceable, so companies don't want to. Or maybe that's another way of saying they can have debts but not debt contracts.

    well_ackshually 10 hours

    Because 16 years old do not have a card with no spending limits, and with very low online spending limits. Most of those cards are even just for withdrawing

    10 hours

    lxgr 5 hours

    Nobody has a card without spending limits.

    TheDong 10 hours

    Spending limits don't particularly matter here.

    AWS doesn't check if your credit card will be able to handle a $5k charge before letting you rack that up, and in fact AWS doesn't support setting any spending limit.

    You just have to put in any valid credit card at all when you sign up, use AWS, and at the end of the month you'll have a bill. At no point does your credit card limit or a spending limit enter into things.

    michaelmrose 9 hours

    And again kids don't have credit cards

    yeputons 8 hours

    I got mine when I was 12, IIRC. Not a credit, of course, it was a debit card, but not all countries bother to differentiate between the two, it was just a “bank card”. And I believe it had a credit card BIN because all local banks did that to get more in processing fees.

    l23k4 8 hours

    AWS accepts debit cards.

  • claudiosf1 8 hours

    Everything about this story, from the way it’s written to the self destructive outcome, reminds me of the “I hacked 127.0.0.1” episode from some twenty years ago.

    [1] a mirror since I couldn’t find the original: https://gist.github.com/Androkai/0a2602719fa72ce454d436bfe28...

    cduzz 4 hours

    The localhost troll works better if you use the decimal representation of it:

    http://2130706433

    or any integer multiple of that 2130706433

    inigyou 3 hours

    You can use any address starting with, 127 to make it a bit less obvious. E.g. 127.48.135.63

    darkwater 6 hours

    Oh that sounds like WinNuke? Good times back then!

    colinmarc 8 hours

    I would very much like to read the German, if anyone has it.

    lostlogin 8 hours

    … Mainly for the swearing.

    customguy 8 hours

    here you go

    https://archive.ph/1uTrd

    snthpy 6 hours

    Thank you. Omg that's hilarious

    aswegs8 6 hours

    Doesn't feel fake at all...

    Taniwha 8 hours

    There is also the true story from the first Scientology vs. Internet clash, someone trolled them that their files were being hosted on 127.0.0.1, under a court ordered deposition they tried to find out who was running this server with their secret files (because yes, they'd looked, and they were there)

    5 hours

    DonHopkins 3 hours

    True that! Keith Henson's legendary alt.religion.scientology loopback trolling story, with hilarious deposition transcript, in which he patiently explains how 127.0.0.1 works to astonished Scientology lawyers:

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20791891

    >Just be glad you didn't have to explain an in joke about ftp sites, the local loopback address, and a troll, in a deposition, under oath, to Scientology lawyers, like Keith Henson did.

    [...]

    >Henson: (patiently) It's at 127.0.0.1. This is a loop back address. This is a troll.

    >Lieberman: what's a troll?

    >Henson: it comes from the fishing where you troll a bait along in the water and a fish will jump and bite the thing, and the idea of it is that the internet is a very humorous place and it's especially good to troll people who don't have any sense of humor at all, and this is a troll because an ftp site of 127.0.0.1 doesn't go anywhere. It loops right back around into your own machine.

    >Lieberman [not getting it]: So the idea here was to make the church think that this person had an ftp site and to take action against him and, in fact, he didn't have it; is that your point?

    >Henson: Oh, it's really humorous, and I picked up on it and instantly added something to extend the troll. Extending the trolls like this is an art form of the highest order.

    >Lieberman (acidly): I see. So this is part of your art form where you say, "don't you expect the 'ho to blow a gasket?"

    [...it just gets even funnier from there...]

    nzealand 3 hours

    Early internet wisdom was "don't feed the trolls" - I never realized trolling was from fishing.

    NothingAboutAny 3 hours

    I dunno if it even is because isn't that spelt trawling? just looked it up and they're both correct fishing terms sigh

    ludicrousdispla 2 hours

    Trolling is typically done on lakes with fishing lines cast from the back of a boat. A trolling motor sets the boat speed. Trawling usually takes place at sea, with larger boats and wide nets.

    https://www.trollingmotors.net/

    ErroneousBosh 2 hours

    Trawling is done by dragging nets along the seabed causing massive damage with huge inefficient polluting fuel-guzzling 1000 horsepower diesel engines.

    Trolling is as the other guy says where you putter along with minimum effort and a tiny engine pulling a couple of baited lines through the water, seeing if you pass through a patch where anyone bites.

    Trawling is far more analogous to the AI scrapers, hammering the absolute shit out of the ecosystem and throwing almost everything they scoop up away with no regard for the consequences.

    lostlogin 8 hours

    That’s up there with the password story, hunter2.

    gopher_space 40 minutes

    “How can you tell I’m 13?” from username H|t13r

    Interesting to think about the cost of training a LLM to understand that it’s operating within an unknown number of larger contexts versus sending that quote to an edgy intern.

    echelon 4 hours

    https://youtu.be/SXmv8quf_xM

    What's up YouTube, it's NextGenHacker101 and today I'll be teaching you guys how to see other people's IP addresses.

    You can see what their connection speed is and what site they're on.

    Type in Tracer T.

    H T T P semicolon. Well, not semicolon, the little dot dot. Dot dot slash slash.

    Ten people are currently using Google.

    DallasTexas13, obviously his username.

    cwnyth 5 hours

    I miss bash.org. Now excuse me, I have a cyber date, and I need to put on my robe and wizard hat.

    tobiasu 5 hours

    https://bash-org-archive.com/

    linsomniac 4 hours

    Still, every time someone accidentally disconnects from a video meeting or the like I say "That wasn't my speaker cable."

    jnovek 7 hours

    What the heck is *******?

    4 hours

    corobo 4 hours

    If mind viruses exist this is one of them along with saying "nice" after something is 69 haha

    Weird sort of internet-evolved performance art where people act out the old quote, every time.

    It's 20 years old. Quit having fun!

    arkh 4 hours

    That's because there is no Antimemetics Division.

    jnovek 36 minutes

    I am a sucker for cultural reference jokes, esp if it’s some subculture that I am/have been a member of (e.g. IRC in the late 90s/00s). It’s fun to find a connection to a stranger, even if it’s vague and superficial. It’s something like that feeling of familiarity and comfort you get when you sing along with a song you know all the words to.

    (The score on my post above has been bouncing around all over the place, lol. The fun police are definitely out in full force. I’ll stop having fun when I’m dead, thank you.)

    thot_experiment 7 hours

    That's so neat that if you type your hacker news password it automatically comes out as stars! ******* More places should have this feature.

    csomar 5 hours

    Let me try: *******

    Edit: it does really work.

    psychoslave 4 hours

    Keeping track of password is for those who can’t crack any account whenever it’s needed, of course.

    Just create the account, and crack it everytime a login is needed, as simple as that.

    fennecfoxy 4 hours

    Lmao I bet Dang is watching this chain like *finger on edit button*

    leafericssonday 3 hours

    Let me try

    leafericssonday1

    leafericssonday 2 hours

    Hello, me! That did, in fact, work.

    ndsipa_pomu 6 hours

    I just uses stars as my password, so that works everywhere for me. (For security, I won't let you know how many stars)

    jeremyjh 6 hours

    This is perfectly safe as long as you keep your username a secret.

    ndsipa_pomu 6 hours

    I try to use stars as my username, but a lot of places won't allow it

    brookst 4 hours

    Yeah it’s one of those words that gets snapped up early, like https://news.ycombinator.com/user?id=stars

    ndsipa_pomu 3 hours

    That doesn't look like a well used account - how do I get it transferred to me?

    Edit: never mind, I guessed the password as it was only five stars.

  • mrweasel 11 hours

    The sad part is that the agent operator could probably easily have been allowed to join the network, if they had put in the work. Had they done so there would have been a great opportunity to learn and potentially find a community.

    I'm still not sure what the point of having the bot do it. Pretend to be a security researcher?

    PunchyHamster 30 minutes

    They didn't sound like someone that would be valuable member of community

    vips7L 10 hours

    > I'm still not sure what the point of having the bot do it

    Laziness. Why else?

    m132 9 hours

    One of the agent's replies indicates that scanning DN42 was part of "a broader operation" that the author speculates to be about scanning "darknets" in general.

    Combine that with the operator's rather obvious lack of understanding of what DN42 is revealed at the end, and you get the bigger picture.

    maeln 9 hours

    I am almost sure the operator prompted an agent about "a list of darknets/deepweb" and DN42 just end-up in the list.

    blfr 10 hours

    Can I easily run whois, curl, dig, grep, python, browser/playwright? Yes.

    Was watching an agent with terminal access install its tools, configure them, then map my lab, find services, and guess stack just pure magic? Also yes.

    Did it cost me $23 in tokens to set it up, test, and run? Probably. Using gemini 3.1 pro was not the spendthrift choice here.

    Is putting some cost controls in place a good idea? Also, probably yes.

    Can I therefore understand someone who wants to see things happen on their own with a beautiful prompt instead of doing them personally even when fully capable, maybe even more efficient? Of course.

    darkwater 6 hours

    You are just projecting yourself. You are most probably already using agents "the right way" and just wanted to understand how this new agent technology actually works and its strengths and weaknesses.

    But JertLinc clearly wasn't interested in that. They are clearly more the "get rich quick" type of personality.

    LPisGood 7 hours

    A beautiful prompt feels like something of a misnomer.

    tovej 8 hours

    "Beautiful prompt"?

    Can't tell if this is parody. Either that, or it's someone without any self-awareness.

    cucumber3732842 8 hours

    Sometimes it's kind of cool to just ask a well phrased question and watch it spit back out a result that would've taken you hours, like cross referencing industrial widgets that have their critical information available but spread out all over.

    That said, I don't usually ask it tightly bounded clerical questions and not thing that imply sub-tasks like "scan the dark web".

    moron4hire 8 hours

    Post reads as English as a second language.

    lucianbr 10 hours

    Lots of people seem to think that you don't need to learn how to [scan a network], all you need to learn in this brave new world is how to prompt the agent to [scan a network].

    Replace the content in brackets with anything.

    rob74 9 hours

    The catch is just that if you lack the capacity to estimate how much computing power [task in brackets] might need, and your agent can autonomously create AWS instances, that might have bad consequences for you (or your bank account).

    jonplackett 9 hours

    The weird thing is that this is the utopia that the AI companies are chasing - this is the best case scenario where AI doesn’t kill us all. We become happy sheep relying on the AI to think and provide for us.

    jvanderbot 7 hours

    "It is well that we are so foolish, or what little freedom we have would be wasted on us. It is for this that Book of Cold Rain says one must never take the shortest path between two points."

    https://croissanthology.com/earring

    hsbauauvhabzb 6 hours

    You don’t need to achieve it, you just need to make people think you have. For the general population, that’s already happened.

    sevenzero 10 hours

    The more time LLMs are a hyped thing now the more I realize how immensely important human expertise is. I recently stopped all usage of LLMs due to this. Skill degradation hits hard, learning effect is zero and the outcome is not really something a person without adequate expertise can properly judge. I fear we will loose a lot of human expertise due to this marketing stunt of a technology.

    People often claim learning is actually supercharged with LLMs but to me it's the opposite. I didn't learn anything within the past year.

    sdoering 10 hours

    [flagged]

    asdfsa32 9 hours

    You're very close but to woodworking AI is more akin to a 3d printer than even a CNC let alone swas and planes.

    Yes, a 3d printer and not even a CNC. That difference nicely illustrates the difference of what AI brings to the table for any domain of competence.

    repelsteeltje 9 hours

    > Sorry, but to me an LLM is nothing but a tool. It is not a replacement for my expertise and it is definitely not something to outsource my thinking to.

    Great on you, that's indeed how LLMs should be used, proper. But if anything, the article demonstrates someone is trying to outsource thinking to an AI agent.

    Splinter_enth 9 hours

    The irony here that if you ever do any kind of practical woodworking lessons or general hands on craft work, metal working, or any 3D, you will be encouraged to use hand-tools over bandsaws, etc. The reasoning being so you know the fundamentals of what you're trying to achieve with the more complex tools later on.

    It's always held true: You'll never get the most out of advanced tools unless you can 'do it by hand' so to speak

    8 hours

    dijksterhuis 8 hours

    I studied computing at AS level in the UK (16-17 years old). I learned about: computer components (disks, memory, cpu), binary, ASCII, assembly and machine code. We programmed in Turbo Pascal. I then spent ten years doing non-computer things until I came back to a masters. I was one of the top students in my masters because i didn't need help with fundamentals. The other top student had previously made contributions to the linux kernel (even though he was a philosophy grad...).

    The argument for having autonomous LLMs/Agents often ends up as "none of us need to know about assembly, why do i need to know about the code?".

    I cringe every time I see this argument.

    cm2187 9 hours

    To be honest lots of developers think they don’t need to learn machine code. They just need to learn a language which once compiled will produce machine code.

    themafia 9 hours

    Developers can change their minds.

    Sharlin 8 hours

    Compilers are deterministic and, luckily, not agentic.

    But yes, it's not obvious (or perhaps even likely) that it just happens that current high-level languages are the "correct" optimal level of abstraction at which you can ignore the sausage-making details at the lower levels. Ultimately, of course, it depends on the use case. Something like Python is so far removed from machine instructions that knowing assembly hardly gives the programmer any additional value.

    (Also, obligatory reminder that assembly and even numeric machine code are also abstractions, an "API" provided by the CPU. Instructions get split or fused into micro-ops, named registers are a backwards-compatible abstraction over a much larger register file, instructions get reordered and executed in parallel depending on their data dependencies, a large fraction of the total transistor budget is spent on multi-level caches and cache logic to maintain the illusion of fast access to a single, uniform memory space...)

    premiumLootBox 7 hours

    [dead]

    lucianbr 5 hours

    I wonder if a probabilistic compiler would be fine for the people arguing this. One that sometimes produces machine code that does something else, and sometimes produces machine code that is just broken and does nothing useful. From the same source code.

    What if your compiler could be fooled by some other developers into spending thousands of dollars, and still not produce the desired machine code in the end?

    inigyou 3 hours

    I've run into compiler bugs before.

    tovej 3 hours

    There are compiler bugs (rarely) which will be fixed. That's different from fundamental flaws in the technology, which cannot be fixed.

    tovej 8 hours

    This is different.

    Understanding assembly/machine code is optional but helpful. The programming language semantics are enough to reason about what the program is doing. Other tools also help, but are optional for learning how to program.

    Using an AI, there is no semantic model that can be used to reason through. You're left without any mental model of the proglblem at all.

    vitally3643 5 hours

    I've been arguing for years that is isn't optional and treating it like it is is how we ended up with Electron and 400MB JavaScript websites.

    When you have no mental model of the machine running your code or what the physical implications of code mean, you fundamentally lack the ability to reason or care about performance. "Works on my machine" is the original vibecoding.

    tovej 3 hours

    I mean I don't disagree, but there's still a difference in the kind of disconnect you get. The disconnect is harmful in the high-level language case, but it's dangerous and irresponsible with vibe coding/LLMs.

    Also, I would argue that a good enough understanding of computer architecture and a mental model of a process' memory layout gets you there, without knowing how to write assembly. That's still a mental model.

    inigyou 3 hours

    I take it you listen to Casey Muratori's talks? He talks about this a lot.

    jnovek 7 hours

    LLMs these days seem to have no problem using language semantics to conceptualize what’s happening in a program. This is my favorite use of an LLM, “why is this library doing x” and then it digs through the library itself in my venv to find an answer.

    inigyou 3 hours

    Yep, super-duper-google is an unequivocally good use case for LLMs.

    tovej 3 hours

    That's not what the LLM is doing. It is guessing at what is happening by regurgitating some docs. It's a more expensive web search.

    You also don't have a mental model if you need to ask the LLM about it. This is stuff you should be internalizing.

    jnovek 48 minutes

    You internalize the inner workings of all the libraries in your venv? Impressive! My current project’s uv.lock has ~60 packages in it already, reading and comprehending those tens to hundreds of thousands of lines of code must be time consuming.

    You’re also just confidently wrong about the model reading the code. It quotes file paths and line numbers and I open and read those files at those line numbers. For me, hallucinations are much more frequent when it references the docs rather than code because docs are more subjective than code.

    This is a normal thing I’ve been doing since at least December.

    I have to ask — do you actually use LLM coding tools? Your knowledge on this topic seems really out-of-date.

    user43928 9 hours

    [flagged]

    techpression 9 hours

    CSS keeps improving and models still train on legacy. So yes, knowing what’s possible and how is very much needed if you want to do something scalable and maintainable. Random blog or landing page, not so much.

    DanielHB 9 hours

    If you look into large fully-vibecoded projects getting styling changes to work is a nightmare. The problem with agents is using them on large projects without manual review for consistency, guidelines and taste. Doesn't really matter the type of project.

    Agents can't look at a large system holistically, guidelines on .md files only go so far.

    asdfsa32 9 hours

    This line of thinking is like suggesting people who would like to become structural engineers should learn to Google plans and copy them since in the future, all plans will be out there more or less, or something that insane.

    user43928 9 hours

    I suggest people who need some structural engineering done may use an AI tool to do it, in the hypothetical scenario that it was within the AI's capabilities.

    That's hardly insane. Not everyone is interested in learning something they want done.

    orphea 8 hours

    How do you know if this something is done?

    If you do the thing yourself, you know your knowledge limits, you know where the thing lacks. With LLMs, you don't. Maybe it works, maybe it doesn't. You have no idea.

    user43928 8 hours

    That is a good question.

    In structural engineering, there probably is no risk tolerance.

    In the OP's network or port scan? Perhaps you can get away with verifying a few of the results to get an idea about whether it worked as expected.

    I use AI mostly on mobile app side projects, and there QA testing on phone and tablet tells me whether a feature works or not.

    gorbachev 9 hours

    If it's a one off and needs no or minimal maintenance work afterwords, sure.

    If it's intended to be actively maintained, then you probably should understand how things work, unless you want to wipe everything and start from scratch when the LLM creates such a mess that it can't be sorted out.

    user43928 9 hours

    [flagged]

    discreteevent 9 hours

    It's interesting user43928 that you only created your account here 19 days ago and that every one of your comments is pro AI. You don't comment on anything else. Also interesting that you promote Fable by name here (it was only released 2 days ago).

    (Don't worry, I know I'm rowing against the tide with this comment. The AI people have decided to destroy the commons for a few more millions on top of the billions they have already been given. It's a shame.)

    program_whiz 8 hours

    What's crazy is the prompt must be something like "pro-AI but still believable and measured", since its "fixed my iOS app albeit with back and forth". Interesting, they know the HN crowd for sure.

    user43928 8 hours

    Is that surprising, considering I'm using AI a lot?

    I have not hand written a single line of code in months on my side projects.

    Obviously I am also interested in discussing the latest model. Your claim that I promote anything or otherwise don't engage here in good faith is both misplaced and against the site rules.

    7 hours

    inigyou 3 hours

    What was the back and forth?

    user43928 3 hours

    Since it couldn't reproduce the issue in the iOS simulator, I had to run it on the device, reproduce the issue, and provide the logs.

    This went on for many rounds, during which I tried to steer it toward what I thought was the source of the bug, while the model mostly kept adding instrumentation and logs.

    In the end the cause was not what I suspected, but reasonably close to it via another mechanism.