this post was submitted on 27 Apr 2026
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It's already happening. I'm looking to "retire" this year (which essentially means I'm just quitting this bullshit, I can't deal with it anymore.) I've been doing consultation/contracting dev work for the past several years and about 2 years ago I pivoted from that to essentially doing code review for AI slop for my various clients. It's always the same song and dance of "this is why your new fancy AI produced crap doesn't scale, this is why there are exploits, this is how you fix it with real devs, yadda yadda yadda". I was naive and hoped I could make a difference by hoping these startups and small tech houses would get the picture and pivot back to utilizing actual devs. hire people back and what have you. But none of them have. So I'm getting paid and wasting my time talking to CTOs and upper managers and I might as well be talking to a brick wall. they're all going to continue to ride this AI train until the wheels come off and even when the carriage is missing all the wheels they'll try to push it along down the tracks.
it's hopeless. I've given up. I know it's not something unemployed or under-employed devs want to hear but this is the conclusion I've come to within the past couple months. I hate this industry now. absolutely hate it. I might just focus on FOSS stuff, contribute to random projects or start maintaining some and call it a day. but the passion for coding and anything tech related has been sucked dry from me thanks to LLM's and AI.
Do you see viable career paths for people who love technology and computer science without a formal degree who is interested in getting into it, or is that just a dead end pipe dream?
Depends on who is hiring.
I'm in the role you are describing. I can't code, but I'm good at troubleshooting and if required I can read code.
I would much prefer to work along someone who spent highschool tinkering with game mods than someone with a CS degree, as troubleshooting requires a specific skillset that is developed better by breaking and fixing things than by learning the fundamentals of how computers work or best practices for coding.
That said, if you wanna work for an OEM doing actual chip design or engineering and stuff, you're prolly gonna need that degree.
Cyber security
I would just keep cashing those checks....