| ▲ | montyanne 2 days ago | |||||||
Just curious - how much of this was AI generated? The readme has crazy emojis & the code was all checked in at once, which is usually my telltale for these kinds of things. Didn't see anything crazy in the source files. I think its polite to indicate AI agent usage in security related projects like this since they can have huge holes if they're just being vibe coded. -- Edit: Intended to post this on the board root, sorry. | ||||||||
| ▲ | jeroenhd 2 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
High emoji use is something I've noticed a certain generation/subgroup of developers just default to. Keeps things informal/quirky. The AI had to steal that style from someone, after all. This repo is actually very low on the emoji side. Looking through the code itself, I can't tell if it's AI generated or not, but I wouldn't assume the use of emoji automatically mean AI wrote the text. | ||||||||
| ▲ | zamadatix 2 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
It's a fair question but I had a bit of a chuckle at the idea having a shit ton of emojis in your GitHub readme was the first flag it might be AI. Mostly because I always assumed the opposite - that GitHub readmes were a big part of the emoji ridden listicle training data (the other being slop "news" site/social media listicles) for AIs in the first place. After all, they are decently well written and come with grabbing the code to train from anyways. | ||||||||
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