this post was submitted on 03 Jun 2026
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Seems like he's been pushed into using LLMs as a way to cope with the deluge of LLM-generated security reports.

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[–] supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz 4 points 16 hours ago* (last edited 16 hours ago) (1 children)

Github and the whole culture that it came out of it used to (it feels sooooo good to say that in the past tense) be globally hinged on Silicon Valley, why would you not expect to see a anomalously high number of US developers on it?

[–] fruitcantfly@programming.dev 1 points 15 hours ago (1 children)

That's definitely a possibility, along with the possibility that countries with worse English language skills might be underrepresented on GitHub, despite having universal healthcare. Conversely, if the US is over-represented on GitHub, then the pool of US developers who are not already active on GitHub may also be depleted compared to other countries. However, that is not something we can read out of the available evidence.

The most we can conclude is probably that the US getting universal healthcare might result in an increase in available OSS developers, depending on which assumptions turn out to be correct, but suggesting that it would lead to an order of magnitude increase is surely premature

[–] supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz 2 points 15 hours ago* (last edited 15 hours ago)

suggesting that it would lead to an order of magnitude increase is surely premature

The US is continuing to worsen in performance on meaures of small business entrepreneurship in essentially all industries in the US, software and software adjacent industries are no different especially if you don't get distracted by the AI bubble inflating that value of a bunch of illusions claiming to be businesses.

It is easy to see how the inability of the average person to try a new idea, or risk taking on a project that may not pay off immediately translates directly to a lack of available developers for open source software projects.

The impact of Universal Healthcare would be huge for open source development in the US, the amount of programmers that would be pushed over the line from "just making ends meet while having a work life balance" to "ok maybe I could devote some time to open source development".

Don't get me wrong though, I think we need to normalize straight up paying developers for Open Source Development. Just because it is open source doesn't mean it doesn't take labor, that is not the argument I am making.

https://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/issue-briefs/2018/oct/affordable-care-act-impact-small-business