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by copx
33 days ago
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>If adaptation means accepting that the scoreboard is now an AI orchestration benchmark, then we should say that honestly instead of pretending the old competition still exists. This is like someone complaining that making machine parts has been ruined: Skillful craftsmen used to make them by hand using manual tools! Nowadays the CAD/CAM/CNC cheaters have almost completely automated the whole thing. How is the next generation of craftsmen going to learn how to craft a gear by hand when the process of gear making has been reduced to pressing start on a CNC machine?! See what I mean? Sorry, I think this article is just Luddite. I can empathize with the pain of your beloved craft basically being rendered obsolete by new technology, but the process can neither be stopped nor is it bad in general. The manual skills you trained with CTF puzzles are now simply no longer relevant . (Field-specific) "AI orchestration" is the new cyber securtiy skill if LLMs really have become so good at this, and what the author used to do manually then has the same value as being able to craft a gear by hand. |
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Within the framework of your analogy, it's like responding to someone active in DIY maker groups suddenly dealing with an influx of influencers in meetups showing off Chinese junk from Etsy to post on Tiktok, and accusing them of being a Luddite blinded by their zealous hatred of mass production -- both strangely abrasive and also fairly nonsensical except as a "mass production supporter" social signifier.
Not to mention, in the article they specifically describe themselves as a heavy user of frontier models for security research ever since the release of Opus 4.5, calling them "useful within the field". In fact I don't see any actual criticism of AI/LLMs anywhere whether for security research, programming or anything else, except for making competitive CTFs no longer viable.
What does it take to avoid the "Luddite" brand? Using AI themselves and praising AI as useful (to the point of having a lopsided advantage over humans) isn't enough? Do they also need to say "I haven't written a line of code in 6 months/it's easily a 100x multiplier for my job" every time they mention it too?