| ▲ | firesteelrain 8 months ago | |||||||
I disagree that coding doesn’t have regulation. If you have never developed code in a professionally regulated industry such as Airworthiness then you haven’t been exposed yet to an area that requires rigorous process. There are regulated areas where software is regulated. I have DIY’d an addition onto my house with professionally architected blueprints and engineering seal. During various stages, I would call the City who would send code inspection officials to incrementally sign off on my project’s progress. Other than pouring a new slab of concrete and electrical, I built it all myself to code. I followed YouTube tutorials. My point is that DIY isn’t the issue - lack of oversight is. With standards, expert input, and review processes, even non-experts can safely build. AI-assisted coding needs the same approach. | ||||||||
| ▲ | trog 8 months ago | parent [-] | |||||||
All true but tell the average programmer that you think their industry should be regulated and they should potentially be held liable for their code. This is not a popular opinion on software development circles - unless you're already in one of those regulated fields, like where a software engineer (a literal accredited engineer) is required. But it's been an increasingly common talking point from a lot of experts. Bruce Schneier writes about it a lot - he convinced me long ago that our industry is pretty pathetic when it comes to holding corporations liable for massive security failures, for example. | ||||||||
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