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  3. Absolutely true.

Absolutely true.

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  • Quinn NortonQ Quinn Norton

    @jzillw @cstross 🫣

    Charlie StrossC This user is from outside of this forum
    Charlie StrossC This user is from outside of this forum
    Charlie Stross
    wrote last edited by
    #10

    @quinn @jzillw I spent a few years doing back end dev in a payment service provider that hooked into all the big British high street banks. About 10% of their managers were brilliant, 70% were a waste of oxygen, and 20% were clearly undercover anarchists seeking the downfall of capitalism by weaponizing Svejk-like cheerful ineptitude.

    Mark KoekM J 2 Replies Last reply
    0
    • Charlie StrossC Charlie Stross

      @quinn @jzillw I spent a few years doing back end dev in a payment service provider that hooked into all the big British high street banks. About 10% of their managers were brilliant, 70% were a waste of oxygen, and 20% were clearly undercover anarchists seeking the downfall of capitalism by weaponizing Svejk-like cheerful ineptitude.

      Mark KoekM This user is from outside of this forum
      Mark KoekM This user is from outside of this forum
      Mark Koek
      wrote last edited by
      #11

      @cstross @quinn @jzillw LOL I have some experience in other places but those numbers don't sound unreasonable to me at all 🙂

      Jacek WesołowskiJ 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • Charlie StrossC Charlie Stross

        RE: https://mstdn.ca/@charette/116127384919473905

        Absolutely true.

        (For those who haven't dealt with banking IT: banks are in the business of managing financial risk, and it doesn't get any riskier than allowing an enthusiastic intern who occasionally lies to you and hallucinates on the job to refactor a 60 year old code base that nobody really understands, without oversight, that handles all your customers' money. The phrase "sued into a smoking crater of banking wreckage the instant anything goes wrong" springs to mind!)

        Poligofsky 🇨🇦8 This user is from outside of this forum
        Poligofsky 🇨🇦8 This user is from outside of this forum
        Poligofsky 🇨🇦
        wrote last edited by
        #12

        @cstross Is that what happened in 2008/9?

        Charlie StrossC 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • Mark KoekM Mark Koek

          @cstross @quinn @jzillw LOL I have some experience in other places but those numbers don't sound unreasonable to me at all 🙂

          Jacek WesołowskiJ This user is from outside of this forum
          Jacek WesołowskiJ This user is from outside of this forum
          Jacek Wesołowski
          wrote last edited by
          #13

          @mkoek @cstross @quinn My almost entire experience is in video game development, i.e. a completely different space, and the 1-7-2 ratio holds, except instead of anarchists we get tech bros who are clearly trying to milk the project's funding dry and don't care if it collapses as a result.

          (roughly 15% of commercial game development projects are ever completed; of those that see release, roughly 15% are financially successful)

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • Jacek WesoÅ‚owskiJ Jacek WesoÅ‚owski

            @cstross On the other hand, my brother chose a career as a programmer for banks around the year 2003. Every single job he had back then just added to his personal list of banks where he wasn't going to keep his money. He had seen their backends and was afraid. I distinctly remember one particular job where his boss was the CEO's wife who knew nothing about software engineering and wasn't above e.g. testing in production.

            i.e. sometimes banks manage financial risk by allowing it.

            CaliCarolJ This user is from outside of this forum
            CaliCarolJ This user is from outside of this forum
            CaliCarol
            wrote last edited by
            #14

            @jzillw @cstross

            I have a friend who has run loan operations in small to mid-sized regional banks her whole career and it's kind of amazing that none has gone down hard
            yet, just on the basis of systems issues. The companies merge repeatedly and each successor enterprise is a frakenstein's monster of old systems from each previous merger held together by baling wire and bubble gum. Throw vibe coding into the mix and the whole jenga pile (to mix metaphors) may finally come tumbling down.

            Malcolm HerbertM Ms NgoC 2 Replies Last reply
            0
            • Poligofsky 🇨🇦8 Poligofsky 🇨🇦

              @cstross Is that what happened in 2008/9?

              Charlie StrossC This user is from outside of this forum
              Charlie StrossC This user is from outside of this forum
              Charlie Stross
              wrote last edited by
              #15

              @8r3n7 My experience was of '96-2000.

              In 2008/09, half the main banks in the UK were nationalized to stop them going bust and taking half the populations' mortgages and savings with them. They ended up back in private hands again a decade later.

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • Charlie StrossC Charlie Stross

                RE: https://mstdn.ca/@charette/116127384919473905

                Absolutely true.

                (For those who haven't dealt with banking IT: banks are in the business of managing financial risk, and it doesn't get any riskier than allowing an enthusiastic intern who occasionally lies to you and hallucinates on the job to refactor a 60 year old code base that nobody really understands, without oversight, that handles all your customers' money. The phrase "sued into a smoking crater of banking wreckage the instant anything goes wrong" springs to mind!)

                Mark OtwayM This user is from outside of this forum
                Mark OtwayM This user is from outside of this forum
                Mark Otway
                wrote last edited by
                #16

                @cstross

                Also, the entire finance industry is on a massive cocaine-style high about AI and vibe coding, and have drunk *all* the Kool-Aid, with an "Emperor's New Clothes" denial of the downsides. So it wouldn't surprise me one jot if managers at bank say "we've vibe coded all the stuff, and there's no risk because we're rockstars".

                (I've worked in software Dev in investment banks and other financial institutions for the last 30 years)

                1 Reply Last reply
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                • CaliCarolJ CaliCarol

                  @jzillw @cstross

                  I have a friend who has run loan operations in small to mid-sized regional banks her whole career and it's kind of amazing that none has gone down hard
                  yet, just on the basis of systems issues. The companies merge repeatedly and each successor enterprise is a frakenstein's monster of old systems from each previous merger held together by baling wire and bubble gum. Throw vibe coding into the mix and the whole jenga pile (to mix metaphors) may finally come tumbling down.

                  Malcolm HerbertM This user is from outside of this forum
                  Malcolm HerbertM This user is from outside of this forum
                  Malcolm Herbert
                  wrote last edited by
                  #17

                  @jawarajabbi @jzillw @cstross ... I wouldn't stare too hard at any state or federal government systems either, for fear of their imminent collapse ... some sysadmins I knew were extremely wary of rebooting or power cycling some ancient but critical systems because there was a significant chance they wouldn't come back if they did ...

                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • CaliCarolJ CaliCarol

                    @jzillw @cstross

                    I have a friend who has run loan operations in small to mid-sized regional banks her whole career and it's kind of amazing that none has gone down hard
                    yet, just on the basis of systems issues. The companies merge repeatedly and each successor enterprise is a frakenstein's monster of old systems from each previous merger held together by baling wire and bubble gum. Throw vibe coding into the mix and the whole jenga pile (to mix metaphors) may finally come tumbling down.

                    Ms NgoC This user is from outside of this forum
                    Ms NgoC This user is from outside of this forum
                    Ms Ngo
                    wrote last edited by
                    #18

                    @jawarajabbi @jzillw @cstross This is exactly how the banking system is, even large banks, & the work of integrating or migrating those systems is frequently farmed out to consulting firms (ask me how I know). It’s all fragile, held together with tape, & breaks all the time.

                    I’ve been away from that world for a bit, but I think it’s very likely those people would be looking at LLMs as a godsend.

                    The Lady (La Donna)L 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • Charlie StrossC Charlie Stross

                      @quinn @jzillw I spent a few years doing back end dev in a payment service provider that hooked into all the big British high street banks. About 10% of their managers were brilliant, 70% were a waste of oxygen, and 20% were clearly undercover anarchists seeking the downfall of capitalism by weaponizing Svejk-like cheerful ineptitude.

                      J This user is from outside of this forum
                      J This user is from outside of this forum
                      John Rohde Jensen
                      wrote last edited by
                      #19

                      @cstross
                      'Cheerful ineptitude' is a glorious term which I will use without restraint from now on.

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • Charlie StrossC Charlie Stross

                        RE: https://mstdn.ca/@charette/116127384919473905

                        Absolutely true.

                        (For those who haven't dealt with banking IT: banks are in the business of managing financial risk, and it doesn't get any riskier than allowing an enthusiastic intern who occasionally lies to you and hallucinates on the job to refactor a 60 year old code base that nobody really understands, without oversight, that handles all your customers' money. The phrase "sued into a smoking crater of banking wreckage the instant anything goes wrong" springs to mind!)

                        Henryk PlötzH This user is from outside of this forum
                        Henryk PlötzH This user is from outside of this forum
                        Henryk Plötz
                        wrote last edited by
                        #20

                        @cstross Also, we don't need to vibecode this, just do it carefully.

                        I was once involved with a company that did semi-automated COBOL->Java translations, with very good effect. The way I understand it, the end result you got was the business logic in reasonably decent, maintainable(!), Java, which then called into a monstrously gigantic "Do what COBOL would have done here" library for the actual calculations.

                        It wasn't cheap, but it was also not half-assed.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • Ms NgoC Ms Ngo

                          @jawarajabbi @jzillw @cstross This is exactly how the banking system is, even large banks, & the work of integrating or migrating those systems is frequently farmed out to consulting firms (ask me how I know). It’s all fragile, held together with tape, & breaks all the time.

                          I’ve been away from that world for a bit, but I think it’s very likely those people would be looking at LLMs as a godsend.

                          The Lady (La Donna)L This user is from outside of this forum
                          The Lady (La Donna)L This user is from outside of this forum
                          The Lady (La Donna)
                          wrote last edited by
                          #21

                          @causticmsngo @jawarajabbi @jzillw @cstross
                          So...are you all saying I need to stash my cash under my mattress or in my freezer?

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • Jacek WesoÅ‚owskiJ This user is from outside of this forum
                            Jacek WesołowskiJ This user is from outside of this forum
                            Jacek Wesołowski
                            wrote last edited by
                            #22

                            @bituur_esztreym @cstross @quinn It also shortens to a nice acronym that sounds way less insulting than it really is ("WoO manager", "he has WoOed all the way through this project", "that's a glorious pile of WoO").

                            bituur esztreymB 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • Charlie StrossC Charlie Stross

                              RE: https://mstdn.ca/@charette/116127384919473905

                              Absolutely true.

                              (For those who haven't dealt with banking IT: banks are in the business of managing financial risk, and it doesn't get any riskier than allowing an enthusiastic intern who occasionally lies to you and hallucinates on the job to refactor a 60 year old code base that nobody really understands, without oversight, that handles all your customers' money. The phrase "sued into a smoking crater of banking wreckage the instant anything goes wrong" springs to mind!)

                              Agnieszka R. TurczyńskaA This user is from outside of this forum
                              Agnieszka R. TurczyńskaA This user is from outside of this forum
                              Agnieszka R. Turczyńska
                              wrote last edited by
                              #23

                              @cstross As a person, who was working in banking IT: yes, but no.

                              I do not know, how that matches other banks, but for me that was: they were risk averse, because of that they were conservative, and that has caused another class of problems.

                              There was one delivery a colleague working in another dept was working on. The delivery required some changes in the storage configuration. It was well tested and documented, and it was sound. However, to make a change on production they needed a blessing from involved department. And, obviously, they needed one from the storage guys, as they will be implementing this part of the change. And they said: sorry, not this quarter.

                              There was a rule for dept managers: three strikes and you are out. Three serious fuckups (affecting prod) happen during a quarter in your dept, and you're fired. Doesn't matter, if you're at fault.

                              So, the storage dept has a serious h/w failure already. You know, those pesky spinning rusts decided to get more rusty. And the manager wasn't keen to take any new risks this quarter.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • Jacek WesoÅ‚owskiJ Jacek WesoÅ‚owski

                                @bituur_esztreym @cstross @quinn It also shortens to a nice acronym that sounds way less insulting than it really is ("WoO manager", "he has WoOed all the way through this project", "that's a glorious pile of WoO").

                                bituur esztreymB This user is from outside of this forum
                                bituur esztreymB This user is from outside of this forum
                                bituur esztreym
                                wrote last edited by
                                #24

                                @jzillw splendid!
                                @cstross @quinn

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