186 comments

  • rsynnott 2 hours ago

    One fascinating thing about the whole AI phenomenon is how incredibly hostile it is to _standards_. Whether something works properly, or is ethical, or is true, no longer matters at all; all that matters is "pls use our AI".

    Microsoft spent literal decades rehabilitating their reputation. And then set fire to the whole thing in an offering to their robot gods.

    And it's not just them. There was a time that Google cared deeply about UX. Now, on macOS Google remaps CMD-G in Google Docs to launch some LLM bullshit (EDIT: huh, they may have fixed this; it was definitely doing it a couple of weeks ago), because, after all, it has only had a standard universal meaning on macOS for about three decades, no big deal.

    • storus 36 minutes ago

      It's a complete takeover of technically incompetent management that feels like it can finally execute their ideas to the fullest instead of relying on those pesky swengs with their obstructions, complaints and problems. We'll soon get the management utopia everywhere.

      • mohamedkoubaa 32 minutes ago

        Principal engineer balks at bad UX when the PM should know better (it's their job)

        2023: Ah well I guess we can't do it

        2025: you're fired. Hey kid we hired two weeks ago, implement bad idea please

        • palata 6 minutes ago

          To be fair, it was already done by bad managers long before.

        • brazukadev 4 minutes ago

          That's how I got my first opportunity 20 years ago

    • kami23 an hour ago

      When I've been working on stuff that requires a SSO login, I noticed that it makes, what I considered, hostile anti-user choices in defaulting to tracking pieces of information I didn't want to track and hadn't mentioned.

      Fair that I didn't instruct it explicitly to make more pro-user choices, it just seemed to think slurping as much information into the backend was an default intention. Wasted a few more tokens to iterate on it to remove things, but it was IMO interesting enough that I finally submitted feedback around what I imagine is an interesting training problem.

    • pocksuppet 7 minutes ago

      Has always been the case. Corporations hate standards and would rather lock you in except where market forces prevent them. It was a miracle we have something like the internet - and the government had to create it.

      Microsoft's decade-long PR rehabilitation has worked wonders for them.

    • ExoticPearTree 33 minutes ago

      > Microsoft spent literal decades rehabilitating their reputation. And then set fire to the whole thing in an offering to their robot gods.

      Probably they thought the new generations forgot about how awful they were in the not so distant past.

      I think they set it all on fire because greed got the better of them again.

      • cyanydeez 30 minutes ago

        AI psychosis. Divide between rich and poor. They live in their own golden bubbles and there's no sanity checks. The workers are so far removed from the realm of competentance and influence it's just CEOs and VPs trying to pump the next 6 months stock value regardless of anything.

        It's like the zeitgeist has decided the only thing that matters is their own farts and how they dont smell.

    • janice1999 an hour ago

      They invested billions. They're scared.

      • ExoticPearTree 25 minutes ago

        > They invested billions. They're scared.

        They could have shipped a good product with all those billions they spent in reinventing Clippy.

        I have this feeling that their bet was that all the Microsoft shops will jump on Copilot without looking at alternatives, so they did not really have to make it as good as their competition.

        • rsynnott 22 minutes ago

          Making good products simply no longer seems to be on the agenda for most of these companies.

        • bigyabai 23 minutes ago

          > They could have shipped a good product with all those billions

          They did. It's called Azure: https://www.geekwire.com/2026/microsoft-tops-wall-street-exp...

        • altmanaltman 16 minutes ago

          Microsoft continues to make billions in profit despite its spending on AI, because it has a diversified business that generates revenue. I don't get why they would be "scared"? It's basically a calibrated risk at that level.

      • cyanydeez 28 minutes ago

        They invested billions. They can exit in 6 months if this thing stays afloat.

        I don't think it's fear; it's greed.

    • diego_sandoval 12 minutes ago

      > Microsoft spent literal decades rehabilitating their reputation.

      Mmm... I think I missed that part.

      • smaudet 2 minutes ago

        Not everyone bought it, but they campaigned hard...and now see it was all just a dog and pony show. The hold-outs were right...

    • pjc50 an hour ago

      The only question is "number go up?": will this result in more money from investors or not?

    • fuzzy_biscuit 22 minutes ago

      Not that surprising when you consider the monumental investments. It's heinous but right in line with modern corporate business ethics.

    • giancarlostoro 30 minutes ago

      Its even worse in my eyes, they dont even offer a model they themselves maintain.

    • buzzerbetrayed an hour ago

      > There was a time that Google cared deeply about UX

      Have we been using the same Google?

      • dwedge 43 minutes ago

        Their search homepage was supposed to be minimal. I was at a tech talk given by Google sometime around 2012 and they said that their ad service is not under any circumstances allowed to slow down the page load - if the ads don't return before the page is ready the pager is rendered without ads.

        Chrome had so many great ux choices originally, such as tabs all staying the same size when you were closing them so that you could close multiple easily and only resizing after a second or two (that stopped working around a year ago). Hell there are even rumours that Chrome is called Chrome because it was a polished UX.

        Their original products were so smooth compared to what was there before. Search compared to altavista, mail compared to Hotmail, both compared to Yahoo!. I really don't know where your perspective comes from. GCP?

        • phatfish 25 minutes ago

          If i remember chrome:// used to have special meaning in Firefox (and probably well before that), and was used to tweak UI settings. I always assumed this was where Google took the name from.

          • rsynnott 18 minutes ago

            Chrome is a now-somewhat-archaic term for GUI (or specifically the actual elements of the GUI, not the concept), and Netscape/Mozilla did use the term a lot. Google claims that their browser is called Chrome because of an association with fast cars (presumably Google was keen to market it to extremely old people, chrome not having been a particularly big thing in cars for a very long time).

      • rsynnott 21 minutes ago

        Admittedly, it's a while ago. But original gmail, say, really did put a huge amount of effort into it.

      • HeavyStorm an hour ago

        We have. That's why the parent said _there was a time_, implying that this is no longer true.

      • frizlab an hour ago

        Some people seem to think they cared, at some point. I’m not one of them.

    • krainboltgreene an hour ago

      > And then set fire to the whole thing in an offering to their robot gods.

      It's the bourgeoisie dream: A means of production that also does the labor 24/7 and can't complain, infinitely spawnable. Theoretical slavery+, so of course they're throwing everything into the furnace for it.

      • ryandrake an hour ago

        These next few years are the real turning point. If they are right about AI and robotic workforces, then it's checkmate--they don't need us anymore, and we're next for the furnace. If they're wrong... well, I don't know... Will there be any consequences? Maybe a few people lose a few percent of their net worth.

        • le-mark 43 minutes ago

          Google will definitely lose. Llms supplants search. But not the old document search which they stopped doing long ago.

          Add in the fact that open weight models are 6-12 months behind frontier models means AI companies aren’t building a moat, they’re on a treadmill. And treadmills don’t justify the valuations OR the hype.

          AI companies are in trouble.

          • storus 32 minutes ago

            I see one profitable enterprise for AI that involves spying on everyone, managing their lives (or otherwise) tightly, automating foreign conquests and needing to make only the top decisions while delegating everything else, like a king. I can see a group or one could say a class of people that would happily invest in such future.

          • pfdietz 17 minutes ago

            What does their patent moat look like?

        • HeavyStorm an hour ago

          I guess if they are wrong the world economy crashes and burn again, because they wasted all these shiny dollars on infra build out. It's lose lose.

        • rsynnott 14 minutes ago

          Initially I assumed that when the bubble burst, some VCs would go bust, Oracle would go bust, a few hyperscalers would take a significant haircut but carry on, and life would pretty much go on. However there's now sufficient dodgy AI-related debt making its way onto the debt markets that the bubble burst could be a lot messier, and it may be more than a few percent.

        • fragmede 10 minutes ago

          A few percent of your net worth, when you're sitting on top of a pile of gold like a dragon on a yacht is one thing, but when you're a retiree, and you're on a fixed income, living off the proceeds from an annuity and a reverse mortgage, and inflation in all its forms is eating into the plan you had, and you don't have any backup, yes there will be consequences!

        • bdangubic an hour ago

          > Maybe a few people lose a few percent of their net worth.

          the entire US economy rides on this now so it’ll be more than few people and a lot more than few percent.

      • pron 42 minutes ago

        Turns out it's not infinitely spawnable after all.

      • nz an hour ago

        People (well, American people (disclosure, I am an American)), used to be scared/worried that Silicon Valley will eventually move to Bangalore or Shenzhen, because of wage-discrepancies, and so on -- and it is not a totally unreasonable concern, considering that the _Silicon_ part of Silicon Valley has been slowly relocated to Taipei, Seoul, Tokyo, and a few others. At this point, maybe we should start pushing that the _rest_ of Silicon Valley gets relocated somewhere else, too.

        It's a breeding ground for Edisons and Morgans, not Teslas. It is profoundly depressing that SV is doing everything it can (knowingly or unknowingly, not sure which is worse) to get the entire planet to stop taking it seriously and to shun it.

      • outside1234 an hour ago
        • 2ndorderthought 32 minutes ago

          One things for sure I won't be buying any SaaS, streaming, or ordering from Amazon if I have no future prospects for work. I already stopped most of my subscriptions because of a layoff unrelated to AI.

          We buy food and go for walks as entertainment. It's been refreshing but also obviously scary.

          • sdevonoes a minute ago

            Didn’t get the “scary” part. I also keep my entertainment to the minimum dependencies possible. I try to rely on stuff I own: music cds, iso videogames + emulators, physical books or ebooks (thanks Anna), exercise outdoors… ditching streaming like netflix/youtube, buying crap on amazon, uber, etc

        • whattheheckheck 34 minutes ago

          This feels like the same mechanism for climate change. The actors dont care since they're not completely responsible for that outcome and benefit from ignoring it

    • lpcvoid 2 hours ago

      AI is the ultimate grifting tool, grifters gonna grift.

      • grebc an hour ago

        5 years ago it was blockchain & NFT’s.

        Same hypers just moved to different technology.

        • 2ndorderthought 31 minutes ago

          In my circles it literally was the same people. Instead of trying to get me to buy ETH they started talking only via LLMs. Unsurprisingly we aren't in touch anymore... Maybe they are happier with their chatbots, I'll never know that's for sure

        • PyWoody 43 minutes ago

          All of the "carbon credit" guys I know are now all in on AI with zero sense of self awareness.

          • ExoticPearTree 21 minutes ago

            > All of the "carbon credit" guys I know are now all in on AI with zero sense of self awareness.

            Some people made a lot of money off of those platforms. Everything was a nice story, but once you dug just a wee bit... smoke and mirrors.

        • thesmtsolver2 42 minutes ago

          Yep, 25 years ago it was the web. And remember the great electricity grift 100 years ago. And horseless carriage grifters like Ford!

      • TeriyakiBomb an hour ago

        See how fast so many of the crypto and NFT/Web 3 lot shifted to AI, like rats on a sinking ship.

        I think VCs saw Crypto and dreamt of being able to create the same amount of irrational value. AI has the same technical complexity "You can't easily explain it in a single sentence" energy but unlike Crypto and NFTs, enough actual utility to not seem completely illegitimate. It literally is the perfect hype grift tool. Crypto has survived almost 20 years off of nonsense, how long can this crap last. sigh

        • OutOfHere 40 minutes ago

          If you still think crypto and AI are nonsense, then I guess you will carry these beliefs the rest of your life, but these beliefs won't outlive you, as they have no relation to reality.

          • TeriyakiBomb 19 minutes ago

            I said AI has utility but drives irrational levels of investment. Crypto has little utility besides a place to gamble, con credulous people and otherwise act as a really shitty store of wealth.

            Most modern crypto projects barely bother to promise to do anything useful let alone achieve anything useful, which the overwhelming majority do not.

            These aren't beliefs but statements of fact.

            • OutOfHere 14 minutes ago

              Your knowledge and understanding of things is so limited and wrong that it's dumb even to discuss it with you. I will however serve the public interest by correcting some of your gross misinformation. Crypto encompasses stablecoins, commodity tokens, also countless other tokens representing stocks, and it facilitates immediate and permissionless transfer of funds, all of which go well above and beyond being a store of wealth.

    • AlexandrB 19 minutes ago

      > Microsoft spent literal decades rehabilitating their reputation.

      "Decades" is a stretch. There was a brief window around the Windows 7/8 era and then, like a dog returning to his vomit, they returned to their user-hostile bullshit. Windows 11 is the culmination of that, but Windows 10 was plenty bad. Remember how Windows 10 made Solitaire a subscription service? Sticking copilot into everything is just more of the same.

  • ddkto an hour ago

    The best part is that copilot commented on the PR saying that this doesn’t actually change the behaviour, creates inconsistency in the codebase and suggested reverting the change! (This comment seems to have been ignored…)

    > The configuration schema default was changed to "all", but the runtime fallback in extensions/git/src/repository.ts still calls config.get('addAICoAuthor', 'off'). This is now out of sync and can lead to unexpected behavior in contexts where the contributed configuration defaults aren't loaded (e.g., some tests/hosts), and it makes the intended default unclear. Update the runtime fallback to match the schema default (or omit the fallback so the contributed default is used).

    • stefan_ 4 minutes ago

      I also liked the bot posting screenshot diffs that are all false positives, while apparently not capturing the default change (is it not in some menu somewhere?)

    • HeavyStorm an hour ago

      That's pretty standard review practice in there by now.

  • yankohr an hour ago

    This feels like the modern version of 'Sent from my iPhone' but much more invasive. Git commits are legal and technical records. Falsifying who authored a piece of code just to pump up AI usage stats is a huge breach of trust and it is disappointing to see Microsoft prioritize branding over the integrity of the developer's log. I expect my IDE to record what happened, not what the marketing department wants people to think happened.....

    • tln 31 minutes ago

      Absolutely, messing with commits is more invasive than messages. It gets worse:

      "Sent from my iPhone" appears in the authoring view, and you can delete it.

      Co-authored-by: NEVER appears in the commit message UI - it is added without the user even seeing it.

    • polski-g 38 minutes ago

      Good point. That fake commit addendum means that the entire commit contents would not be under copyright protection. AI generated code is not currently copyrightable.

    • Gibbon1 31 minutes ago

      One could argue that Co-Authored by Copilot means 'not under copyright'

  • artyom 14 minutes ago

    To everyone who bought the "developer-friendly" Microsoft of VSCode fame from a few years ago: this is what they forever did, and forever will do.

    This company has been pulling these tricks since the early 90s.

    If you fell for this once again, there's nobody else to blame but yourself.

  • SwellJoe 2 hours ago

    "Sent from my iPhone" marketing only works if people want everyone to know they're using the product.

    • djyde 2 hours ago

      However, there's one counterexample: some email clients in the past experienced explosive growth by adding signatures. It was annoying, but it definitely worked.

      • blaze33 2 hours ago

        Someone, somewhere, probably has a "% of commits co-authored by copilot" KPI.

      • manquer an hour ago

        Doubly so, because you are being used as ad-channel and not being compensated for it either.

    • ssl-3 2 hours ago

      That's one way that it works, but that's not the main driver.

      This kind of tagline marketing works best with people people who aren't even aware that they're participating, and who aren't bothered to do anything different it even if they become aware.

      The juice isn't worth the squeeze, so the marketing remains.

        Sent from my iPhone
        Downloaded from Demonoid
        Rusty n Edie's: The world's friendliest BBS 216-726-0737
      • SwellJoe an hour ago

        But, also, I think in this case, it makes people less likely to use the product, as there's a lot of baggage around agent-written code. People who shouldn't be using it are using it to make so many PRs it's become a DoS attack for some projects, so a lot of project maintainers are rightly sniffy about AI-written code.

        • ssl-3 an hour ago

          I'd like to think that the level of cognitive sophistication necessary to assess the situation negatively would be very widely available. That would be a very pleasant line of thought for me.

          But then, I look at the modern-world empires that are built upon advertising and realize that reality just isn't that way. At all.

        • TeriyakiBomb 42 minutes ago

          100% I have one ~tiny~ project that has a handful of stars and actual people seem to use it. End of last year I received a huge slop drive-by PR on it. Spent 20 minutes reading it, realised it was just nonsense. I want my friggin' 20 minutes back.

          I can't imagine how infuriating this is for maintainers of projects with much more footfall. I'm frankly shocked more aren't just outright closing the doors to PRs from unknown contributors

      • SwellJoe an hour ago

        Dang, now I wanna call Rusty n Edie's BBS for some reason.

        • projektfu an hour ago

          It's the masochism of downloading images at 2400 baud.

    • frizlab an hour ago

      But you can see it and remove it before sending. It’s definitely not the same.

      • nsxwolf 32 minutes ago

        Sometimes it randomly pushes without me asking, so I have a mess to clean up.

    • k8sToGo an hour ago

      Microsoft already does this with their mobile Outlook. Sent by Outlook Android / iOS on the bottom of the message.

      • chrisweekly an hour ago

        Huge difference: the commit signature may not have had anything to do with Copilot, whereas email sent by mobile Outlook was... sent by Outlook.

    • sunaookami an hour ago

      Does anybody else remember Tapatalk? They did the same with signatures in forums.

    • sleepybrett an hour ago

      "sent from my iphone" originally meant more than just "i have a fancy phone that lets me send email" in the early days it meant "I'm not at my desk right now."

  • mister_mort an hour ago

    This is pumping someone's metrics up inside of Microsoft, somewhere.

    The question is - will their boss revert it or encourage it when they discover the source of the stats being juiced?

    • 650 35 minutes ago

      A Principal Software Engineer at Microslop merged this - https://www.linkedin.com/in/dmitriy-vasyura-9191611/

      This is the author of the MR - https://github.com/cwebster-99 - A Product Manager at Microslop

      I've routinely spoken on the uselessness, and oftentimes detriment of product managers in tech.

      The dearth of leadership driving for vanity metrics like PMs writing code doesn't help either.

      • gopher_space 20 minutes ago

        The role feels like it’s borne out of a desire to see employees as fungible.

    • k8sToGo an hour ago

      Isn't that someone the person who created the PR? "Product Manager at @microsoft working on VS Code and GitHub Copilot!" it says on her profile

    • whynotmaybe an hour ago

      Isn't it also cause they want to tag those commit so that they don't feed it into copilot training?

    • telchior an hour ago

      That someone saw Google's claim that 75% of their code is written with AI and said "hold my beer".

      Juiced stats? No such thing, at least as long as stock number go up.

      • liquid_thyme an hour ago

        >No such thing, at least as long as stock number go up.

        You want your 401k to go up, don't you? /s

  • MaKey an hour ago

    FYI, they changed the default of 'git.addAICoAuthor' to 'chatAndAgent' afterwards: https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/pull/312880

    So it was 'off' -> 'on' -> 'chatAndAgent'

  • amarant 2 hours ago

    Microsoft is such a master class in how to make me hate you, quickly.

    • dd8601fn an hour ago

      I know you didn’t mean it that way, but boy did that make me feel old.

      Anyone else remember the bill gates borg category on slashdot?

      • willhslade an hour ago

        Indeed fellow traveller. I do.

    • OutOfHere 37 minutes ago

      There is more of it that's going on. For me, Microsoft's SwiftKey keyboard app sabotages the use of a competing search engine (DuckDuckGo) in Firefox in Android for me. When typing a multi-word double-quoted search phrase, it doesn't allow it to be typed correctly.

  • mrcartmeneses 2 hours ago

    Next it will be Co-authored by Co-Pilot with help from Dominos Pizza

    • Qem an hour ago

      Next Microsoft will sue you to get a share of revenues and ownership as co-author, if your product ever makes success.

    • k8sToGo an hour ago

      But only if you watched this 1 min Segment of today's sponsor...

      Your free commit today is brought to you by duff beer

    • IdontKnowRust an hour ago

      This will be so true hahaha

    • dessimus 2 hours ago

      More like Carl's Jr.: Fuck you! We're eating.

  • cozzyd 2 hours ago

    My newest yocto image mounts a 640K RO tmpfs on top of $HOME/.vscode-server to prevent people using VSCode from shitting all over the relatively small emmc.

    • c0wb0yc0d3r 18 minutes ago

      Can you explain how this works? Doesn’t this also stop you from connecting to it over ssh via vs code?

  • low_tech_love 2 hours ago

    Isn’t this a kind of “leopards ate my face” situation? I thought we had all “agreed” that letting AI write code and take control of software repositories is good, even if we have no idea what is going on beyond a thin surface layer, because well it’s fast and we can fix it later and lol who needs testing? My customers are my testers.

    And now it’s suddenly bad because the developer is the customer?

    • tln 25 minutes ago

      The sneaky commit modification is triggered by very modest usage of AI such as auto-completion.

      Look, if an agent writes the code and the commit message then adding a Co-authored-by by default is ok. Not even showing it before the commit is made is not, and adding the message when AI was just completing code is not.

      • bojan a minute ago

        I genuinely think it's not ok even then. Copilot is a tool, one of many I use. That tool has no business polluting commit messages without my knowledge.

        The appended message isn't even adding any new information, as in this day and age a vast majority of commits is probably "co-authored" by an LLM.

      • AlienRobot 17 minutes ago

        Glorified autocomplete, syntax reminder and random snippet generator thinks it's co-authoring things.

  • MkLouis an hour ago

    Jeez, you can see many things wrong with this new all-in AI direction that Microsoft is taking. Commit by a product manager, who probably actually never digged through the code before…automated ai review not catching the problem, and the vibe codes pr introduction the error itself

    • 650 33 minutes ago

      This was merged by a Principal SWE though. Maybe overruled by leadership :)

  • sedatk an hour ago

    Search for "AICoauthor" in VSCode settings and turn it off.

    • snehesht an hour ago

      To be precise,

      "git.addAICoAuthor": "off"

  • throwaway81523 2 hours ago

    Wonder if they're going to claim copyright interest based on inserting that crap.

  • stodor89 an hour ago

    Adding Copilot as co-author: For when just stealing other people's code doesn't cut it anymore.

  • djoldman 29 minutes ago

    Looks like it comes into play for telemetry and here in actual commits:

    https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/blob/4e312e3c3a18d13c26d...

  • holistio 2 hours ago

    Whenever I use Cursor's voice dictation, my prompts get "Thank you" inserted at the end of the sentence.

    • yNeolh 2 hours ago

      That happens in most speech to text systems, even Superwhisper, Monologue and Wispr Flow. I read somewhere it comes from training on YouTube audio and happens when there is silence. I guess it depends on the model but most of them are based on Whisper which has this problem

      • mr-wendel 24 minutes ago

        Ha, I also have this happen all the time in response to mouse clicks. When playing with Apple Foundation Models + Whisper I noticed that it happens so often that I had to explicitly filter this out before acting on transcriptions.

      • zugi an hour ago

        > I read somewhere it comes from training on YouTube audio

        Does it also insert "please like & subscribe?"

        • ikidd 41 minutes ago

          "Smash that Like button."

  • ninjahawk1 2 hours ago

    Great, here’s how to remove it from your commits:

    Run git commit --amend

    Your text editor will open. Delete the line: Co-authored-by: Github Copilot <noreply@github.com>

    Save and exit

    Force push the change: git push --force-with-lease

    • lpcvoid an hour ago

      Or people could instead not use Microslop software, easy fix for the AI bullshit. But yeah of course you're technically right.

      • ninjahawk1 an hour ago

        I like your solution better.

  • tokioyoyo an hour ago

    At no point in time companies were so desperate for developer attention. It feels like the general consensus is it is a “winner takes it all” race, and everyone has to add as many dark patterns as possible to increase stickiness.

  • ozirus 23 minutes ago

    It's all because of ridiculous performance systems of some $BIGTECH$

    "Here's we increased number of commits by Copilot from X to Y, %Z increase"

  • ryan-a an hour ago

    Time to leave for something else if you haven't already, vscode has been good to us but this kind of behavior is only going to ramp up as Microsoft seeks to get a return on their AI investments.

  • b4rtaz__ 2 hours ago

    This is really bad.

    • glitchc an hour ago

      Should be the top comment for succintly summarizing the situation.

  • chrysoprace an hour ago

    Is this when you add a commit through VSC or does the editor add some git hook?

  • Animats 2 hours ago

    Does that make the code uncopyrightable? Non-human authorship?

    • Dylan16807 an hour ago

      If it's actually co authored then you should be fine on copyright.

      And of course dumb messages that aren't true won't affect copyright.

      • lelanthran 15 minutes ago

        > If it's actually co authored then you should be fine on copyright

        How so? All your outoutput is now legally partly owned by Microsoft?

    • cookiengineer 32 minutes ago

      The real question is why Anthropic was able to use DMCA takedown requests "in good faith" against the Claude leaks when their own CTO claimed it is a 100% slopcoded codebase, and they themselves argue that all LLM generated code is transformed enough to not be copyrightable. Which they have to state without being able to turn back because they violated millions of book and software licenses during training.

      Make it make sense.

    • redwall_hp 2 hours ago

      The courts have determined that, yes, and that is the position of the Copyright Office. And the Supreme Court has rejected appeal, so that's the standing precedent.

      Realistically, look forward to SOX style audits and having to maintain evidence of how much of a code base has human authorship vs machine generation. Or reject slop.

      I can't wait for:

      * The first company to do perjury for litigating over a nonexistent copyright for machine generated code.

      * The first company to get nailed to the wall for reverse engineering and replicating high profile copyrighted code, like Windows.

      • circuit10 15 minutes ago

        Having a tool involved isn't the same as being entirely generated by a tool

        For example, without any AI, if I generate a lookup table for the sine function in my code, that table may not be copyrightable because it was machine-generated, but it doesn't somehow make the rest of the code not copyrightable either

        "Co-authored by" doesn't imply it was entirely machine-generated

  • rwaksmunski an hour ago

    Just when you think they've reached the bottom, they just keep digging.

  • flipthefrog an hour ago

    A lot of bitching about Microsoft here, for something Claude has been doing forever. I have a git hook that rejects any commit containing the line Co-authored by Claude

    • qezz an hour ago

      That's a fair point, but claude code is not an editor (yet?), and when you use claude code, and allow it to commit things, it's almost certainly "co-authored by llm".

      Back to vscode, people get the "co-authored" line even if they didn't use the AI features.

    • aledujke 43 minutes ago

      Well claude does it if you ask it to commit instead of you, and it lets you review it, this is not the case with this feature - judging by the comments on PR. Sometimes it says co-authored by copilot even when the code is not generated by AI. Also it will never say co-authored by claude or whatever, always copilot. Also why would my IDE care about this and not the AI itself?

    • vultour an hour ago

      Are you ashamed of other people finding out you used Claude? I think the co-authored-by bit should not be a setting at all, AI-generated code should be clearly identified.

      • sieve an hour ago

        > AI-generated code should be clearly identified.

        Let AI autonomously produce code of a quality that I care about and I might consider giving it credit. I don't know how other people write code but I come up with an idea and use a multitude of LLMs to brainstorm a reasonably comprehensive spec that any reasonably competent person can read and produce a working program from, including a locally working Q2 quant of Qwen 3.6. Even Kimi is as good as Claude at most coding tasks, and I don't see why any single agent deserves any credit for my design.

        Let artists and filmmakers start watermarking their output with the tools they use and I might reconsider my decision.

        • Paracompact 39 minutes ago

          > Let artists and filmmakers start watermarking their output with the tools they use and I might reconsider my decision.

          They do, though, in the form of metadata.

          • sieve 9 minutes ago

            Do Adobe or Arri or Red get authorship credit for the work their hardware and software do on projects? After all, artists would not be able to produce a single pixel without them. In a similar vein, you could make the argument that modern farming is sitting on your ass in your modern tractor while software handles most of the work. Does John Deere get rights over a quarter/half your harvest?

            I am stuck between the luddites and "artisanal" coders on this one. LLMs are neither as smart/useful or as dumb/useless as people think. Unless your job involves producing useless garbage every single day, good software requires a lot of thought before the first line of code is even written. For those with serious domain knowledge, the thinking time can be compressed into minutes/hours rather than days/weeks it might take.

            LLMs are a tool. You either pay for it or you use the freely available ones on your own hardware. As long as the output is directed by my thinking, the output belongs to me. If it were up to me, I would abolish IPR (and even permanent ownership of land) as a category altogether, but that is a different discussion.

      • dangus an hour ago

        Basically what you’re saying is that if AI does anything on your computer, anything the AI impacts you should lose control over. If the AI touched it at all in any way, big or small, you now lose ownership of the actions your computer takes (on open source tools, I might add).

        In case you need reminding of common sense, I’m supposed to be allowed to decide what my commit messages are because it’s my fucking computer.

        I prefer that my software is not a morality police.

      • NateEag an hour ago

        I think the Linux kernel's standard of disclosure via the "Assisted-By" trailer is the right move.

        Makes it clear you used a bullshit machine, without implying it's an author.

        ...assuming you think using them at all is a good move - I won't deny they have some utility (though I'd argue much lower than many seem to think), but I do presently believe they're a disaster for humanity.

        The ruination of the Internet with slop, the massive propagation of propaganda, and the insanely easy-to-wield tools for abuse are in no way worth the ability to accrue tech debt at 10x velocity (though to be clear, accruing tech debt can absolutely be a useful strategy, if one I personally dislike).

      • bdangubic an hour ago

        mind-boggling people are trying to hide this, tells you all you need to know about our “profession.” presence of that hook or the like in a place of business should be fireable offense

    • tomjakubowski an hour ago

      I've never had Claude Code in VSCode add attribution to a commit when I didn't use it. VSCode is adding the attribution even when you have all copilot features disabled and therefore could not have used it.

    • kafrofrite an hour ago

      Please do share

      • conception an hour ago

        Ask claude to “Write a hook for Claude code that rejects any get commit that includes “co-authored by Claude” in it”

      • bethekidyouwant an hour ago

        Just ask Claude to write it..

  • ekjhgkejhgk 21 minutes ago

    Speaking of which, why does anybody use VS Code?

    https://vscodium.com/

    I do at work because nobody listens to me, but at home never ever have I used VS Code. Use just Codium.

  • the13 32 minutes ago

    Default or mandatory gift authorship?

  • rbbydotdev an hour ago

    So GitHub reached its tipping point, I guess vscode will follow

  • ninkendo an hour ago

    > No description provided.

    Right because of course you wouldn’t provide an explanation for why such a change would be made.

    Providing zero description or background or explanation for why a change is made is probably the only thing that pisses me off as much as a pure AI-slop description of a change: your job in a PR description is to give the background for why a change is being made. Honestly, any PR which doesn’t do this should be insta-closed by policy. But it totally tracks with the level of quality I’d expect from the company in question.

  • thombles an hour ago

    I saw this the other day and was pretty confused - I prefer to write my own commit messages and wondered if I’d accidentally let the AI do it this time. Nope, just MS changing things behind my back. Sigh.

  • bakugo 35 minutes ago

    Having to scroll through 3 screens worth of giant automated comments on the linked PR before seeing any comments written by humans is the cherry on top.

    So many repositories look like this now, it's honestly sad.

  • awesome_dude 2 hours ago

    I personally don't mind if an AI inserts it's "Co-Authored by" tag into commits it has worked on - it's transparency, I used its help and it should get credit for good work, or disdain for bad.

    But, just inserting the tag because it's being used for git commands - there's a line there.

    • vunuxodo an hour ago

      > it should get credit for good work, or disdain for bad

      Hard disagree. The "credit" it gets is through the form of charging my credit card.

      Imagine for a moment that you are a company which hired a human developer to create your app rather than AI. In this case, the developer sold his or her right to credit by way of becoming a paid employee. All credit/rights/etc to the code become the ownership of Company, not the developer.

    • low_tech_love 2 hours ago

      I’m sorry, I don’t get it: a piece of software needs credit for creating another piece of software? Like, would you credit GCC for adding optimisations to your binary?

      • dlivingston an hour ago

        It's useful as metadata (like how JPEGs can store the camera model it was taken on, or PDFs contain the program used to generate it), but yes, I don't like LLMs giving themselves co-author credit. I turn this off in Claude Code.

      • JoshTriplett 2 hours ago

        It's a useful warning label for LLMed code. (When an editor isn't gratuitously adding it to non-LLMed code.)

      • Jtarii an hour ago

        GCC isn't making editorial decisions.

    • cess11 an hour ago

      The LLM is just a database. Would you be fine if this was done when cribbing stuff from Github, StackOverflow, tutorials and so on, or do you think some databases are more special than others in this regard, and if so, on what merit?

  • coliveira an hour ago

    This is not just a joke, it is a legal nightmare. You may be giving away the copyright ownership, or at least part of it, to Microsoft.

    • dwedge 35 minutes ago

      AI generated code is not copyrightable anyway. The only real question is how much "copiloting" you have to get ownership, and right now the courts seem to be heading towards it not mattering if AI was involved

  • alansaber 28 minutes ago

    Finally the usage metrics look amazing, the masses have woken up

  • clutter55561 2 hours ago

    I got tired of Claude adding their signatures to my commits against my instructions (the settings schema changed at some point), so I added a commit-msg hook that blocks multi-line commits. Easy and works like a charm, and would block this sort of M$ intrusion.

    What a despicable behaviour from M$.

  • ChrisArchitect an hour ago
  • booleandilemma 2 hours ago

    The day I see it does this is the day I switch to zed, or whatever.

  • pelasaco an hour ago

    Wasn’t it discussed here that no copyrights apply to code generated by AI? I’m asking myself whether adding "Co-authored-by: Copilot" means the code is not protected by the GPL, or even allows Microsoft to own your code...

  • morkalork 2 hours ago

    Well, that's good news for all the developers working at companies with delusional management proclaiming "100% of code will be written by AI in 6 months"!

  • te_chris an hour ago

    Claude code and codex do this all the time too. Fucking annoying.

    • loufe 12 minutes ago

      There's a large gap between what they do (same env var disables this since the beginning) vs Microsoft bucking it's way through AI coauthorship credit in a multi potential author china shop, though.

  • c0balt 2 hours ago

    Growth hacking at its best /s

  • Scarbutt 2 hours ago

    "chat.disableAIFeatures": true

  • preommr 2 hours ago

    I really hope the editor wars don't start again. I've been happily using VsCode for years now. More than happy in fact, it's one of the best pieces of software I've ever used, as evidenced by how AI companies basically started as a VsCode fork.

    But this is going full-throttle on enshittification.

    WTF happened at microsoft (github, openai partnership, copilot pricing) that all this shit just ramped up to a 11?

    • glitchc an hour ago

      The editor wars never ended, and VSCode has been user hostile since inception. It came with unavoidable telemetry right out the gate.

    • opan an hour ago

      vim and emacs are both still great choices.

    • majormajor 2 hours ago

      > WTF happened at microsoft (github, openai partnership, copilot pricing) that all this shit just ramped up to a 11?

      "Make a great free product so that we can enshittify it later" is an infamous MS playbook. Maybe nothing happened, maybe just the usual MS at work.

  • 2OEH8eoCRo0 2 hours ago

    If you're angry about this then what are you going to do about it?

    • 1dontknow 21 minutes ago

      Make sure to delete VSCode fully from any PC I have access to and annoy all my coworkers to get rid of it.

    • janice1999 2 hours ago

      Moved to Zed and recommended my team do the same.

    • preommr 2 hours ago

      Turn it off and rage on social media.

      If it gets bad enough, look into Zed. Their tagline is literally "your last next editor".

      • glitchc an hour ago

        Zed currently does not have a revenue stream. Ot's only a matter of time before the same shenanigans ensue.

        • janice1999 an hour ago

          They're a commercial entity that sells AI plans and enterprise features.

        • msla an hour ago

          Like how GNU Emacs is completely saturated with AI now?

          (That's sarcasm, in case anyone wants to pretend I'm being serious.)

          • grg0 20 minutes ago

            Emacs is not VC-backed.

      • Scarbutt an hour ago

        Unfortunately, Zed is years behind VSCode in terms of polish, Microsoft supported LSPs just work better in VSCode, they are better integrated, and Zed can't do anything about LSPs memory or peformance.

        • ElFitz an hour ago

          > Zed is years behind VSCode in terms of polish

          One could think that. But VSCode is the one that occasionally failed to simply render text.

          No idea what happened these handful of times, but the UI was just completely screwed up, as if it were one of these "scratch to reveal" games, but with the file’s content (and unresponsive, obviously).