Here is what they say, at the very top they explain that llm's are inherently unreliable. It looks like they offer security tools and safeguards, but they also provide an auto run option. There is nothing a vendor can really be responsible for someone shooting themselves in the face. You can argue that they shouldn't provide that, but that's what people want, so they do, with warnings.
It sounds like this user either didn't use security controls, approved prompts they didn't understand, or disabled the checks entirely. Working in IT/tech a big chunk of my life so far and seeing all the dumb crap people who even know better do, I would bet my house on that being the most likely scenario rather than cursor somehow being at fault here.
They don't "know" anything is the point - they're trying to complete a task and often get confused while doing so. Until reliability of task completion approaches several 9's, which we're a long way off from, this is always going to be a thing.
I guess people are finding out the hard way you do sorta need technical people to say, "hey, maybe this isn't a great idea" rather than trusting marketing hype that says technical skills are dead.
> “When we identified a user trading on classified government information, we referred the matter to the DOJ & cooperated with their investigation. Insider trading has no place on Polymarket. Today’s arrest is proof the system works.”
Today's arrest is proof that Polymarket may have incentivized a key decision maker in this operation to make decisions in a way that would let him profit. This is peak levels of head up ass arrogance.
If I 'choose not to let you post on my website' would you consider this a ban? This reads like a really dishonest shifting of the goalpost for what is effectively censorship of literature. And, if you look at some of the books that were "chose not to have this book in their library" it overwhelmingly focuses on books that feature queer characters, or discuss these themes. Any honest observer knows exactly what is going on here, and as others have noted, this was not limited to school libraries.
Software "engineering" also differs in the way from more formal engineering in that there are very rarely absolutes, there's often many different correct ways to solve a problem, each possessing their own pros and cons. So, it could feel like "guessing" choosing a certain approach over another, but more senior people usually have an intuition brought from experience which one will work better and be more informed of the tradeoffs, so it looks a lot less like guessing.
Yet when we talk about controlling trains, airplanes, freight ships, medical devices, nuclear power plants and space stuff we suddenly know how to do it?
There is software engineering and it is known how to do things that absolutely must not fail. It is just thst these standard are not commonly deployed if nobody forces you to deploy them. And why would you? Costs money and a software error is widely treated like divine intervention.
There is a big difference between knowing something must not fail, and how to make it so it will not fail. The latter is where opinions and approaches often differ, in ways that more formal engineering does not.
I'm very wary of anyone in tech/software eng that says "this is the only right way to do this." I'm aware those attitudes exist everywhere.
I once found a very interesting definition of engineering. It is about making something that just barely does the job. Doing it better costs more usually and doing it worse costs lives.
Not much different in software. There is always many ways of solving problems and that is typical of any engineering. Contrary to sciences.
> There’s not enough women in technology. What a fucked up industry. That needs to change. I’ve been trying to be more encouraging and helpful to the women engineers in our org, but I don’t know what else to do. Same with black engineers. What the hell?
See what the current thought leaders in tech believe and say out loud and this makes a lot more sense.
This would indicate wherever they were hosting their site on no longer exists. 503's even on pages that should mostly be static suggest the backend no longer exists, or whatever ingress they're using in front of it disappeared. As far as I can tell every single page on their site is 503'ing.
https://cursor.com/docs/enterprise/llm-safety-and-controls
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