An internal Microsoft memo has leaked. It was written by Julia Liuson, president of the Developer Division at Microsoft and GitHub. The memo tells managers to evaluate employees based on how much t…
I think they meant that coders can run their code and find out if it works or not but lawyers would have to stand in front of a judge or other legally powerful entity and discover the hard way that the LLM outputted statements were essentially gobbledygook.
But code that doesn’t crash isn’t necessarily code that works. And even for code made by humans, we sometimes do find out the hard way, and it can sometimes impact an arbitrarily large number of people.
I think they meant that coders can run their code and find out if it works or not but lawyers would have to stand in front of a judge or other legally powerful entity and discover the hard way that the LLM outputted statements were essentially gobbledygook.
But code that doesn’t crash isn’t necessarily code that works. And even for code made by humans, we sometimes do find out the hard way, and it can sometimes impact an arbitrarily large number of people.