For whatever reason, hadn't associated the inattentional blindness of bug writing with the invisible gorilla experiment and car crashes - selective attention fails. People looking right at the gorilla strolling into production while chest thumping, but not seeing it, for a focus on passing basketballs. That's quite an image. Tnx.
For users on fixed monthly pay accounts they'll be incentivised to do the exact opposite, as their income is fixed and the cost goes up for more tokens.
If the available evidence (third-party cloud pricing of open models) is correct and they make a profit on tokens but lose it on training, they will be incentivised for as many tokens as possible on pay-as-you-go API calls. If it isn't correct and they actually lose money even per token, they're also going to be incentivised to reduce output here.
Whereas with LLMs, they’re really good about providing objective metrics about the bugs they found, especially as a subsequent LLM security scan does not know whether the same LLM wrote code earlier, the opposite of human devs.
And is the idea that organizations and/or benchmarks won't keep track of vulnerability rates for code from different LLMs?
(And individual devs get paid more the more bugs that they introduced they “find”, and they have more job security with an “maintainable” code base than a “finished” one.)
No. You will switch to a competitor that does a better job or charges less or both.
This is why monopolies are such a big problem. Because under a monopoly you are right.
Apple made a ton of money off of lightning port accessories, you see it referenced here all the time. Apple had no incentive to swap to USB-C though it would create a better product and be more uniform with the rest of the world, so they kept with it despite incredibly vocal calls to swap because there was a ton of money they were making in the accessories. And it didn’t stop until they were forced to stop by the EU.
When we are talking about products at scale, these kinds of incentive structures play out in very tangible ways. If I have an LLM product and I’m getting two pulls at the hose because you’re burning tokens making stuff and correcting it, I don’t need to do anything. People are willing to tolerate that system to a pretty high degree so long as they ultimately get what they wanted in the end - unfortunately that is a great space to make money in.
The switching cost is not high for LLMs as far as I can tell.