Lutris maintainer use AI generated code for some time now. The maintainer also removed the co-authorship of Claude, so no one knows which code was generated by AI.

Anyway, I was suspecting that this “issue” might come up so I’ve removed the Claude co-authorship from the commits a few days ago. So good luck figuring out what’s generated and what is not.

sauce 1

sauce 2

    • Lee Duna@lemmy.nzOP
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      2 hours ago

      This kind of thinking is what makes billionaires who back AI companies to keep increasing their investments in AI Capex, while leaving others with nothing but increasingly expensive parts and damaged environments.

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      3 hours ago

      oh yes. i caught their comment on github about this already.

      if i had the time i’d fork this and block AI contributions outright. slop certainly doesn’t belong in something that allows us linux users to play something that’s windows exclusive, cause lord knows what it’ll break.

    • Victor@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      It’s really hard to argue against that final paragraph though for real. These are free time projects that people spend time on for the benefit of others. I dunno. Food for thought?

      • e8d79@discuss.tchncs.deM
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        Yes the mere existence of slop machines is totally forcing those developers to shit all over their painstakingly crafted creations and deliberately hiding it. Really hard to argue with that.

        If its such a bother to create something without supporting these fascist enabling and thieving cunts that are all AI companies, maybe they should consider not doing anything at all.

    • Mniot@programming.dev
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      4 hours ago

      “We live in a capitalist hellscape so why bother to struggle against it” isn’t a completely unreasonable take. Too bad, though.

      • Gormadt@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        3 hours ago

        Can’t win a fight if you don’t fight.

        Also standing together is the only way to win such a fight as one against the hellscape we’re facing.

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    Fork it and maintain it yourself then. That’s the beauty of FOSS. I would argue if more people learned to code everytime someone complained about AI use by FOSS project maintainers and contributed (code, bug reports, q&a, community engagement) to the projects they care about, maybe less maintainers will be looking to use LLMs.

    • titanicx@lemmy.zip
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      2 hours ago

      Oh my god but coding seriously sucks. I studied it when I was in college getting my networking degrees. And dear God I hate to code so so much.

        • titanicx@lemmy.zip
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          I mean it was a general consensus. So many people hate the code so many people can’t understand how to code and so many people never want to code. So just in general saying I wish more people would learn how to code and more people should be coding is kind of a moot point. Those people that really want to code and like to code are already the people that are doing it. The rest of us that either hate the code or don’t want the code have to be incredibly careful about people like this that are being disingenious with their code base.

          • SkaveRat@discuss.tchncs.de
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            I mean it was a general consensus. So many people hate the code so many people can’t understand how to code and so many people never want to code

            then they should do something else.

            There are enough people who don’t hate it. love it, in fact

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        But if you started to get involved there would be more eyes and hands on the code which would reduce the use of AI for that purpose.

        You don’t have to code, you can help by

        • writing documentation
        • artwork for a mascot or logo
        • answering questions from people dealing with bugs
        • voicing your interest in features and discussions with design and direction in the project
        • helping organize things
        • manage ci/cd

        None of those require coding skills but are still needed for a FOSS project. So let’s all get to contributing! I expect to see your PR soon!!

  • Crozekiel@lemmy.zip
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    6 hours ago

    I always found Lutris to be troublesome at best. Always had better luck with Bottles.

    From reading the posted threads the Lutris devs have even bigger red flags, the AI usage seems like just another symptom of their total disdain for the users of their program.

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    8 hours ago

    Can a motherfucker get a break, PLEASE.

    I use Lutris for games that don’t work in Steam/Proton, usually an older game like Black and White 2 or the old Sims 2 game (before the updated version came out). Why is everything I like turning to shit! :(

    • Bieren@lemmy.today
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      6 hours ago

      Hell, it’s not even everything I like is turning to shit. Things I already hate are getting worse as well. It’s fucking everything. Either AI or ads. Shareholders above all.

    • Grass@sh.itjust.works
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      I used lutris for a while but jumped ship to bottles as soon as it existed as I found the UI more tolerable even though it has that gnome app look I don’t really like. Then I switched to heroic which can also handle semi manual wine prefixes with whatever wine or proton variant I want or need, without all the extraneous handholding or terminology renaming.

    • Jankatarch@lemmy.world
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      Some comtributors to vim started using AI too btw. I may learn kate. Hell there is an evil mode in emacs.

  • UpperBroccoli@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    Can it even still call itself open source when it is entirely unclear where the AI they used took the code from, and under what license it was published?

    What even does using AI regurgitated code do to the license of a software product? Because basically what they are doing is exactly the same as going through shit tons of comments on stackoverflow and copying them verbatim into the code base. Without attribution or regard to licensing.

    What shit.

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    10 hours ago

    That’s funny, not long ago people were giving me shit for saying Lutris is a confusing, unintuitive mess.

    Well I guess now we know why.

    • fleck@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      Unfortunately, it is the only way my SO got paint tool SAI 2 with pen pressure working under Linux…

      • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        Well that certainly is an edge case scenario.

        I would hazard a guess that it … should be possible to get it working through another way of setting up WINE/Proton, if you can get all the dependencies and specifics figured out… maybe via Bottles?

        But, figuring all that out would be a hassle, and may just end up not working.

        I mean, if it works, it works.

        The closest thing to that that I can say is that via RetroDeck on Bazzite, on a Steam Deck, I literally accidentally discovered that the touch screen controls for that worked just fine, without me doing anything beyond normal RetroDeck setup.

        Just got annoyed, assuming that I couldn’t use a DS/3DS second screen as a touch screen, ‘Boy I sure with is could just-’ … and then I poked it, and then it worked.

        But thats probably a different ballpark than getting an windows program to play nice with a linux touch/pad/stylus.

    • LiveLM@lemmy.zip
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      No, it was a confusing intuitive mess with tons of broken toggles for legacy cruft long, long before AI code was a thing.

      • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        7 hours ago

        True, but if AI is doing much of the coding, that means the devs have been out to lunch for a while, aka, not actually trying to do the much needed overhaul to the frontend UX.

        • Ajen@sh.itjust.works
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          3 hours ago

          Yes, they were out to lunch before they used AI. Sounds like Lutris was always slop, it’s too bad there isn’t a better alternative.

      • Jiral@lemmy.org
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        8 hours ago

        Heroic is great for newer stuff but I still have Lutris because some older games work there out of the nox just fine while they don’t even launch in Heroic.

      • addie@feddit.uk
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        8 hours ago

        Heroic is best for PC games from GOG, and Epic and Amazon I suppose. Got quite a stock of free games from Epic that I’ve never bothered to start up.

        Lutris did fill a hole for ‘emulation’, all your console games, dosbox &c all in one place. Heroic doesn’t really do that. Looks like it’s time to find another tool that will…

      • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        9 hours ago

        I have not used Heroic much at all, but from what I have used it for… yeah, much more intuitive user interface for the vast majority of the most common use cases.

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    The snipe from the dev about removing the co-authorship is particularly shitty.

    Devs of open source software need the thick skin to be able to say “This is how I’m going to handle things as long as I’m the lead, you don’t have to like it.” but this goes beyond it into an active “fuck you” to their users.

    Edit: the second link has less charged discussion, but it’s still getting wrapped up in “anthropic bad” stuff that’s not actually related to code quality.

    If the project is not the space for non-code quality concerns like Anthropic’s business dealings, then it is also not the place for one of the devs to try their personal social project of “seeing if contributors can differentiate between AI assisted commits and not”. Listing claude as a co-author where it was used serves a practical purpose of drawing extra eyes for review of relevant commits.

  • ☂️-@lemmy.ml
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    8 hours ago

    huh, that’s why it’s been buggy for me then.

    what are your favorite not slop alternatives?

    • okamiueru@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      I might not know the use cases that Lutris covers. But I’ve been very with Heroic Launcher for installing GOG games and keeping them up to date, and with entries within steam.

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    7 hours ago

    I agree with “it’s facebook’s fault for laying off” etc.

    But I also believe they alone wouldn’t use it responsibly. Eliza effect would cloud their judgement and cause problems at some point, no?

    Hell it already makes them not recognize the moral problems with funding data warehouses.

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    13 hours ago

    I don’t get it, why would you take a program (or ANYTHING) you created and let some AI shit all over it. I will never.

    • Serinus@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      Am I allowed to have an unpopular narrative here?

      There are levels of vibe coding, and it’s possible to use AI without vibe coding at all.

      If you’re very targeted in what you’re having the AI do and you carefully review the code, it can be a great tool.

      For example, “make this html grid sortable and add a download button that creates a csv file.” You know exactly what this does, it’s self contained, and it’s something you know can just be copied from stack overflow and applied to your code.

      That works, and works well.

      “Create an app that…” is vibe coded slop.

      • raspberriesareyummy@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        For example, “make this html grid sortable and add a download button that creates a csv file.” You know exactly what this does, it’s self contained, and it’s something you know can just be copied from stack overflow and applied to your code.

        Even if this works, you’ll be stealing someone else’s code without authorship attribution for anything that’s a non-trivial algorithm.

        • Jako302@feddit.org
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          2 hours ago

          The copyright/license issues that come with it due to the current unregulated nature of ai are a completely different issue to the vibecode slop allegations.

      • Kindness is Punk@lemmy.ca
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        10 hours ago

        It can be useful when an experienced programmer knows how to guide it, although you have to be very intentional or you’ll end up wasting your time cleaning up after it.

        That being said I think most people are upset that they’re no longer declaring which parts of code are AI assisted

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      12 hours ago

      I’m going to assume from the part where they say they were at their lowest that the option the saw infront of them wasn’t “code with AI or not” but rather “burnout and don’t code, or code with AI”. And they chose to make progress using the crutch rather than stop. That’s my guess.

      • etherphon@piefed.world
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        12 hours ago

        Humm, I mean, that happens to every creator. Writers block, burnout, etc. I guess it all comes down to what you think is important and your values are. I usually just walk away and do something else for a while, even a few weeks or months.

        • lime!@feddit.nu
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          12 hours ago

          most writers don’t get growing stacks of bug reports. open source burnout is extremely common, unfortunately.

          • iamthetot@piefed.ca
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            11 hours ago

            Like, I agree with you about open source burnout, but it feels weird to make it a dick measuring contest with writers, as a writer myself.

            • lime!@feddit.nu
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              10 hours ago

              writers are arguably suffering more. not because llms can replace them at all to the degree they can junior programmers, but because the people making the decisions believe they can.

              also, i wasn’t the one who brought it up :P

              • kkj@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                9 hours ago

                LLMs also aren’t good at replacing junior programmers, but the people in charge believe that they can do that too.

                • lime!@feddit.nu
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                  8 hours ago

                  well they are, in that they produce bad code that has to be vetted thoroughly and they don’t know git.

              • iamthetot@piefed.ca
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                8 hours ago

                You didn’t bring it up but you’re the one who implied it was a contest of who suffers more. Your comment was worded very much in a way that made it sound like they had it worse than writers, when the original commenter was just stating that all creatives experience burnout (not a comparison)

                • lime!@feddit.nu
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                  5 hours ago

                  it wasn’t really about suffering more, the point was that it’s more out in the open and more directly connecting with people. i’m sure andy weir had the same issues with the martian since it was written in public.

          • etherphon@piefed.world
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            Good point there, that sounds like it would be annoying and I’m sure I would want to fix the bugs as fast as possible too, but then you are using AI and introducing how many more new bugs, and ones that you will not easily be able to track down since you didn’t write the code, so then you are locked in to using AI. Personally I would rather have buggy software, nothing is perfect. Open source developers don’t owe anyone anything, so if people are being assholes about bugs that’s pretty lame.

            • lime!@feddit.nu
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              11 hours ago

              yeah that’s what’s bugging me about all this. “remember the human” is even more important now.

              regarding introducing new bugs, both high-profile cases from this past week have been seasoned developers of tools with extensive test suites that claimed to have tested everything thoroughly. when someone with 30 years of experience say they’ve tested something, i tend to trust that judgement. but on the other hand we’ve also seen the cognitive decline heavy llm usage seems to lead to…

    • yucandu@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      Because you can do a lot more with it, have you ever tried coding? Before AI, if you didn’t know how to do something, it was “Ask a question on Stack Overflow, then get told this question had already been asked/answered, then get linked to a loosely related question”. Now I can ask AI all my random obscure questions.

      I get being cautious around sensitive equipment like banking apps and government databases, but why would you hate LLM-generated code this much?

      • Mniot@programming.dev
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        3 hours ago

        I asked plenty of questions on SO and never had a bad experience. But I put quite a bit of work in. You couldn’t ask “how do i sort a list in JAVA” and get answers, you had to ask “here’s some code I’m writing <working example> and it does <x> but I think it should do <y> because <z> what’s going on?” and people gave some really nice answers. (Or you could put “how do sort list java” into web search and get a fine answer to that; it’s not like SO was the only place to ask low-effort questions.)

        One of the bad things with AI is it’s soooo helpful that when I get questions now it’s like “please create a DNS entry for foo.bar.baz” and they’re asking because the AI got completely stuck on something simple (like making a request to api.github.com) and wandered up and down and eventually decided on some nonsense course of action and the developer has given up on thinking about anything.

      • etherphon@piefed.world
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        What I don’t get, is people’s inability to cope with their own limitations, or find their way out of problems without asking a magic box to do everything for them. Yes I have done some coding. Asking on Stack Overflow wasn’t even that bad, and eventually you could find an answer to almost anything there if you knew what you were looking for. Paging through programming books looking for answers was relatively a lot more difficult. However, both actually taught you things during the process, you made mistakes, learned, etc. The AI is teaching you nothing it’s just doing work for you. I don’t respect that, if you use it that’s you’re business but it’s not your code and not your product or whatever.

        • yucandu@lemmy.world
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          What I don’t get, is people’s inability to cope with their own limitations, or find their way out of problems without asking a magic box to do everything for them.

          I don’t know who those people are. I coded for 20 years before LLMs, and I coped just fine.

          The AI is teaching you nothing it’s just doing work for you.

          Unless you ask it to explain things to you. Which is often required to fix the things that the AI can’t get right on its own.

          if you use it that’s you’re business but it’s not your code

          How is it not my code?

          • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            8 hours ago

            An LLM cannot ever “explain” anything to anyone, because it doesn’t know anything. How are people still trusting anything these fucking things say?

            • yucandu@lemmy.world
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              4 hours ago

              Because it’s right more often than google? I swear you AI critics aren’t actually using AI.

              • ilovepiracy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                42 minutes ago

                Agreed. Delusional mindsets stuck in 2023. I’ve never seen more entitled people before punching on FOSS devs and how they use their free time. “We need high quality, human coded FOSS programs with ZERO AI slop in them!” “Why no, I’ve never contributed to an open source project, nor do I know how to code, why do you ask?”

                Forks exist, get over it.

            • Mniot@programming.dev
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              Right?? It’s bizarre to me that otherwise-smart-seeming people will think they can write “explain your reasoning” to the AI and it will explain its reasoning.

              Yes, it will write some fluent response that reads as an explanation of its reasoning. But you may not even be talking to the same model that wrote the original text when you get the “explanation”.

          • SparroHawc@lemmy.zip
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            9 hours ago

            How is it not my code?

            In case you missed it, courts have ruled that works produced by AI cannot have copyright, because it was not made by a human.

            You can make use of AI-generated code, but you didn’t write it. Since you can’t copyright it, it’s not your code - it’s our code, comrade.

            • yucandu@lemmy.world
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              In case you missed it, courts have ruled that works produced by AI cannot have copyright, because it was not made by a human.

              Courts have ruled that art that was 100% generated by AI cannot be copyrighted by the AI, because the AI is not a human person.

              The same courts have also ruled that works that were assisted by AI but created by a human can be copyrighted by that human.

              So, can you claim copyright in an AI-generated work in Canada? As of 2025, the safest answer is: only if a human author contributed substantial creative effort to the final work. There needs to be some human “skill and judgment” or creative spark for a work to be protected.

              If the AI was just a tool in your hands, for instance, you used AI to enhance or assemble content that you guided then your contributions are protected and you are the author of the overall work. But if an AI truly created the material with you providing little more than a prompt or idea, the law may treat that output as having no human author, and thus no copyright.

              Thankfully real life is far more nuanced than “fuck ai” allows.

      • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        8 hours ago

        Now I can ask AI all my random obscure questions.

        And get the wrong answer. But you don’t know it’s wrong, because you’re not already an expert on the obscure subject.

        Before AI, yes you had to learn how to do things. Why is that bad?

        • yucandu@lemmy.world
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          And get the wrong answer.

          No, it’s right more often than google was.

          If it was the wrong answer, the projects wouldn’t work, now would they?

          Before AI, yes you had to learn how to do things. Why is that bad?

          I’m still learning how to do things, just a lot faster, thanks to this helpful tool. Why is that bad?

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    9 hours ago

    I could never get lutris to even install its flagship games with explicit "support“ and had better luck following online documentation or wine directly.

    So I guess I’m saying, that makes sense. No big loss other than it would be nice I’d there was the tool lutris purported to be to help new Linux converts that had the ideals and quality the Linux community strives for.

    • DarkSirrush@piefed.ca
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      8 hours ago

      The lutris installers repo is community maintained, which means that someone made an installer for a game they wanted to play 6 years ago that worked on their system, but never tested to make sure it would work with others.

      They often include workarounds that were needed at the time, but are very obsolete, and no one is willing to take the effort to update them, and the dev did not provide an easy way to report broken installers fr review/removal.

      • neclimdul@lemmy.world
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        8 hours ago

        I appreciate the response but in this case it was several games and apps that where very active. One of the being WoW.

        Also, lutris itself would often break its own wine install and i’d have to go to the cli and fix it. Hense just using wine directly.