this post was submitted on 26 Mar 2026
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[–] Mwa@thelemmy.club 4 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

The dude really looks unsure about AI ngl.
But according to comments, ig i will stop using Lutris and may switch to the Steam Client.
Tbh he could have handled the situation better. (E.g, keep the AI in Minor Places, used a more ethical model,kept the model on Github.)

[–] lonesomeCat@lemmy.ml 1 points 5 hours ago (1 children)

Try Heroic (though afaik it doesn't support steam yet)

But other than that it's really an upgrade over lutris

[–] Mwa@thelemmy.club 1 points 4 hours ago* (last edited 4 hours ago)

Maybe, but since its a Eletron app I think imma using the Steam Client. (Technically CEF is Electron cause both use Chromium) If anything goes wrong, I will use Heroic.

[–] versionc@lemmy.world 30 points 2 days ago

Regardless of AI, Heroic is a much better alternative unless you need some niche integration that Lutris provides. The Lutris developer is super stubborn about the most strange stuff, like absolutely refusing to upgrade the runtime of the flatpak because of some obscure controller regression. He'd rather see poor performance with super old mesa libraries and poor security for the majority.

But yeah, the heavy AI usage just makes me even more hesitant to use or recommend Lutris.

[–] cannedtuna@lemmy.world 40 points 2 days ago (2 children)

I love Lutris, but man he really screwed himself with his immature approach to this.

I was also suspicious that those Claude co-authorship would raise some issues in the open source community

So he knew it would cause a fuss when it came to light he was using AI, so what does he do?

I configured Claude code to skip the co-authorship line in git commits.

Rather than be fully transparent upfront he hides it. And his response when called out on it was doubly childish.

A lot of people didn’t like how I initially worded my response, something like “good luck figuring out what committed by me or by Claude now that the co-authorship is gone”.

His justifications for the use of it are irrelevant.

I still considered the Claude generated code as something I could have written, just slower.

I also like using Claude to commit code I’ve written myself because it just writes good commit messages…

And his reasoning for why he thinks people are upset at his use of AI shows he doesn’t understand the issue.

I think a lot of the critics think that AI generated code should be flawless.

This doesn’t invalidate the technology as a whole…

Ignoring the many issues with AI that do invalidate it one of which is its inherently anti-FOSS which I guess he doesn’t seem to mind except under the terms that he might be sued for copying someone’s code.

Also, there is enough open source code available that I would hope Anthropic doesn’t feel the need to train their models on potentially litigious code base.

Lmao. Sure.

In is original comments on Github he shifts the blame to overall capitalism but doesn’t see how continuing to pay into AI and further normalize its use as problematic.

So he doesn’t seem to get it I guess.

The rest of the interview is mostly just pro-AI.

[–] JackbyDev@programming.dev 2 points 4 hours ago

its inherently anti-FOSS

My dream is that we get some court to rule that code created by AI is specifically created by a machine, not the prompter, so it's in the public domain. I seriously doubt we'll see that, but I can hope.

(This is not a rebuttal, just discussion. I am not saying people should be pro-AI.)

[–] oddpixel@lemmy.wtf 19 points 2 days ago

Humans love to be lazy when they can be, and AI is a tempting fruit on the tree. People get sold on this vague promise of a shortcut that will allow you to prioritize other things, while whichever plagarism machine arbitrarily inserts whatever code does the job.

His response is a good example of where a developer of a large project who probably doesn't get enough help, or just decided that lazy is better than actually doing hard work, has shut off his brain and is relying on a computer that's incapable of coding standards that benefit the project.

As a senior FOSS dev of nearly 25 years, AI is going to poison our industry with these types of devs enabling it's possible demise.

[–] mranderson17@infosec.pub 0 points 1 day ago

I like this trend of trying to actually talk to people about things they are working on instead of making assumptions in a vacuum. We could use a little more of that.

[–] Gonzako@lemmy.world 0 points 1 day ago

Oh well, thank god I never got down to actually use it

[–] chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.com 0 points 1 day ago

A lot of people didn’t like how I initially worded my response, something like “good luck figuring out what committed by me or by Claude now that the co-authorship is gone”. But really, that’s the point. To this day, I haven’t had a report pointing to a specific piece of code saying “this is AI generated nonsense hallucination”, all the concerns have been about the broader use of AI. It doesn’t mean the code is perfect, some bugs were found. But those bugs were pretty much on the same level as some found in human submitted patches.

Seems reasonable to not want to give extra ammunition to people who just want to harass the project about any use of AI as opposed to contributing anything constructive.