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antonvsyesterday at 4:38 PM3 repliesview on HN

This makes no sense whatsoever.

It's not news that if you just give all developers at a company write access to the production databases, owner permissions on all resources, etc. that velocity can be increased. But at what cost?

The reason we don't do that in most cases is that "move fast and break things" only makes sense for trivial, non-critical applications that don't have any real importance, like Facebook.


Replies

cowlbyyesterday at 8:17 PM

There's thousands of small and medium business though. They have maybe one true CRM, and a dozen spreadsheets/files floating around that would benefit becoming proper apps. People delete spreadsheets all the time!

Sure don't give an LLM agent write access to the modeled CRM that took months/years to build.

But turning a spreadsheet into an app in a few days? By giving the LLM proper read/write capabilities for velocity? I think the case is there for it. Right tool for the right job.

3formyesterday at 5:04 PM

I think the argument would be mostly about the companies where such trivialities like proper auth were given up to maximum possible extent. I'm sure even some bigger ones are only gnashing their teeth over implementing security measures that are required by law and not seeing much point to it.

SegfaultSeagullyesterday at 5:07 PM

This comment is savage and I’m here for it.