| ▲ | bonsai_spool 4 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
There are multiple signs of LLM-speak: > Over the past year, we’ve seen a shift in what Deno Deploy customers are building: platforms where users generate code with LLMs and that code runs immediately without review This isn't a canonical use of a colon (and the dependent clause isn't even grammatical)! > This isn’t the traditional “run untrusted plugins” problem. It’s deeper: LLM-generated code, calling external APIs with real credentials, without human review. Another colon-offset dependent paired with the classic, "This isn't X. It's Y," that we've all grown to recognize. > Sandboxing the compute isn’t enough. You need to control network egress and protect secrets from exfiltration. More of the latter—this sort of thing was quite rare outside of a specific rhetorical goal of getting your reader excited about what's to come. LLMs (mis)use it everywhere. > Deno Sandbox provides both. And when the code is ready, you can deploy it directly to Deno Deploy without rebuilding. Good writers vary sentence length, but it's also a rhetorical strategy that LLMs use indiscriminately with no dramatic goal or tension to relieve. 'And' at the beginning of sentences is another LLM-tell. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | r00f 3 hours ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Can it be that after reading so many LLM texts we will just subconciously follow the style, because that's what we are used to? No idea how this works for native English speakers, but I know that I lack my own writing style and it is just a pseudo-llm mix of Reddit/irc/technical documentation, as those were the places where I learned written English | |||||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | jonny_eh 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> It’s deeper: LLM-generated code, calling external APIs with real credentials, without human review. This also follows the rule of 3s, which LLMs love, there ya go. | |||||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | tadfisher 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
It's unfortunate that, given the entire corpus of human writing, LLMs have seemingly been fine-tuned to reproduce terrible ad copy from old editions of National Geographic. (Yes, I split the infinitive there, but I hate that rule.) | |||||||||||||||||