| ▲ | loeber 5 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Because donating to open source projects today has an extremely unclear payoff. For example, I donate to KDE, which is my favorite Linux desktop environment. However, this does not have a measurable impact on my day-to-day usage of KDE. It's very abstract in that I'm making a tiny, opaque contribution to its development, but I have no influence on what gets developed. More concretely, there are many features that I'd love to see in KDE which don't currently exist. It would be amazing if I could just donate $10, $20, $50 and submit a ticket for a maintainer to consider implementing the feature. If they agree that it's a feature worth having, then my donation easily covers running AI for an hour to get it done. And then I'd be able to use that feature a few days later. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | sarchertech 5 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1. You can already do that it just costs more than $10. 2. Even assuming the AI can crap out the entire feature unassisted, in a large open source code base the maintainer is gonna to spend a sizeable fraction of the time reviewing and testing the feature as they would have coding it. You’re now back to 1. Conceivably it might make it a little cheaper, but not anywhere close to the kind of money you’re talking about. Now if agents do get so good that no human review is required, you wouldn’t bother with the library in the first place. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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