Buried in the story was a deceptively simple question: does your AI agent count as an employee?

At a recent conference, Microsoft executive Rajesh Jha floated a provocative idea. In a future where companies deploy fleets of AI agents, those agents may need their own identities — logins, inboxes, and even seats inside software systems. If so, AI wouldn’t shrink software revenue. It could expand it.

  • KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    4 days ago

    Cool, so until that point in time, my point still stands. You can’t just hand waive and say “it’ll happen eventually” and be expected to be taken seriously.

    • favoredponcho@lemmy.zip
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      4 days ago

      You picked one arbitrary example and hold it up as proof that no one can build complex apps with AI? You know there is more than one example of a complex app. Apple has reported an 84% increase in App Store submissions. That’s pretty much all AI driven.

      • fodor@lemmy.zip
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        3 days ago

        Right right. There’s an AI bubble, and there are AI scams. Of course people will ride the bubble, and scammers will always be with us. Doesn’t mean any of that work is quality, or that it will edge out the other work.

        • favoredponcho@lemmy.zip
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          3 days ago

          We are debating whether AI can write a complex app. I don’t know what scams has to do with anything. You’re simply asserting that all AI code is a scam. That’s odd because major companies that don’t scam their customers are shipping AI generated code into production everyday now. For many companies, no humans are writing code anymore. Must not be terrible code then. In my experience, it’s better than what most humans write. Humans are sloppy and take shortcuts.

      • KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        3 days ago

        You claimed that someone could just whip up a license free version of any tool to bypass the cost of a license fee. Was my choice of photoshop arbitrary? Absolutely, you didn’t give any sort of qualifier as to what counts as “any tool”.

        You can’t both claim that anyone will just use AI to build any tool, and then complain that my choice of tool is arbitrary so should be discounted.

        App Store submissions isn’t a good metric of complex applications. “The fart app” is an app that any AI tool could make, that anyone could then submit, but is in no way complex. Vibe coded apps have taken off, but what was the last long term (even 1 year) successful vibe coded app? Because the vast majority of the news I hear about vibe coded apps is how they had a major security breach.

        • favoredponcho@lemmy.zip
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          3 days ago

          In my view it wouldn’t be the capability of AI that would prevent someone from using it to create photoshop. I could start doing it at home right now. But, it would cost a fair amount in tokens. Someone who is willing to spend $1000 or more of their tokens on doing it will be able to do it. I’ve already used it to edit open source apps I don’t understand myself. I don’t even open an IDE and I can change their functionality.

          Anyway, this is a pedantic conversation. You can read about the changes happening in the industry here. I’m not wrong. People will have to come to terms with it.

          https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/12/magazine/ai-coding-programming-jobs-claude-chatgpt.html