> We did catch it internally in testing [1]
Today:
> bug in the code that was not found in testing.
Original PR: https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/pull/310226
IMO (and I am biased because I have written about this before in https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47164481) but I believe it's to make sure they're legally covering their users, and making sure users of AI tools do at least have some attribution for AI-derived contributions
`user.email` is always my email.
`user.name` is either my account name, or model name like `gpt-5.5-high`.
I can easily filter & blame which line was written by me or some specific AI
(Funnily enough, I always commit through the command line in VS code anyways...not sure why. But I guess I would have avoided this annoyance, so that's a plus!)
So the thing that’s on by default and makes autocomplete worse (plain intelligence never changed my s.x = 0 to s.xVInputRadiusDetectionThreshold = 0 if I happened to take my eyes off the screen for a moment) is now stealing credit for my work?
I’m speechless.
Also glad I use a standalone git client.
The bug is not about code behavior, but rather about getting noticed by users :)
I do my own commits by hand so it's moot anyway, but there's a fair bit of "leopards ate my face" going in the GitHub thread.
“Sent from my iPhone” isn’t an authorship claim.
There is something so gross about injecting an advertising message into every single communication a user has on their device.
You are right, it was advertising, but it advertized the user, not Apple.
I also recommend specifying model name and version so the maintainer knows upfront the level of slop they are dealing with.
I don't want my computer to look like it's racing in NASCAR.
Microsoft should be broken up into a dozen different companies and it's quite clear they violated their consent decree from the US DOJ a few decades later, so they should get punished extra hard. Maybe nationalize Excel putting it in the public domain for starters.