Related:

This is in a PR where Shougo, another long-time contributor, communicates entirely in walls of unparseable AI slop text: https://github.com/vim/vim/pull/19413

Thank you for the detailed feedback! I’ve addressed all the issues:

Thank you for the feedback! I agree that following the Vim 8+ naming convention makes sense.

Thank you for the feedback on naming!

Thanks for the suggestion! After thinking about this more, I believe repeat_set() / repeat_get() is the right choice:

Thank you for the feedback. A brief clarification.

https://hachyderm.io/@AndrewRadev/116176001750596207

@[email protected]

  • TheTechnician27@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Couldn’t help but notice the casual gendering of Claude to “he” as well.

    “Claude” is a male given name. If you think it’s actually a problem, blame Anthropic for giving their LLM a gendered name. I’ve never gendered AI assistants, but I’m not going to begrudge people who do when it’s in the name (or in the case of old Siri, the voice, which would later be the default rather than only option).

    Women named “Claude” exist, but they’re staggeringly outnumbered by men to a point where most people don’t even know of women named “Claude” – let alone would immediately associate it as masculine.

    • Natal@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Claude is neutral and can be given to women too. Though it lost popularity over the male version. There is even a fruit called “La reine Claude” which back translates to the queen Claude. But yeah, Claude was male in my head too so I’m definitely guilty of that too despite knowing and actively trying not to anthropomorphize Large lying models

    • amino@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      it’s extremely telling however the shift in marketing. i don’t believe giving the coding plagiarism bot a male name is coincidental. most feminists would probably agree. we’ve known for decades that chatbots were given female names because they’re trying to reenact some tradwife fetish and attract a male audience

      • TheTechnician27@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        it’s extremely telling however the shift in marketing

        And your hypothesis doesn’t fall apart now why, exactly? AI assistants are more secretary-like than they’ve ever been. “Write me an email.” “Proofread my work.” Beyond that, people are using LLMs as substitutes for significant others.

        And yet now, Microsoft migrated “Cortana” to “Copilot”, Siri is more gender-neutral than ever, Alexa still exists off massive brand recognition, and other major AI services are called e.g. “ChatGPT”, “Claude”, “DeepSeek”, and “Grok”. Collectively, that’s gender-neutral.

        At most, the hypothesis used to be true but isn’t anymore, because you can literally make an LLM act like a tradwife now if you’re so debased inclined, yet the names are broadly neutral. The MIT Press has a good, lengthy article about the history of gender in speech synthesis, as an aside.

    • maegul (he/they)@lemmy.ml
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      2 days ago

      Not blaming anyone, this is social commentary.

      But like the neutral “it” is right there.

      In a world that’s both charged around gender and pronoun usage, and focused on the nature and value of LLMs … I think it’s weird that there isn’t more commonly pushback enforcing the non-human neutral for the simple reason that it’s an objective fact amidst a swampy pool of (mis-)information synthesis.

      A little like the bechdel test, I feel like it’s the casualness and indifference around this gender bias (at least at the moment) that’s interesting and telling.

    • CXORA@aussie.zone
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      2 days ago

      Yes… they chose to give the tool a male name. Did this need to be said ?

      • TheTechnician27@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Yes, because the person I was replying to said:

        Couldn’t help but notice the casual gendering of Claude to “he” as well.

        “Casual gendering” is implying the Vim author calling Claude “he” was totally out of the blue. It’s not “casual”; it’s something Anthropic baked in by giving it a male name.

        • CXORA@aussie.zone
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          2 days ago

          Casual doesnt mean “out of the blue”, it means reflexive or without effort.

          • TheTechnician27@lemmy.world
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            Sure, I know what “casual” means and that out of the meanings, a more apt one I should’ve chosen would’ve been “incidental”. That doesn’t change my overall point that they’re putting the entire onus of the gendering on the author as though it isn’t the same as someone calling Alexa “she”.

            Replace this entire scenario with someone calling Alexa “she”: the accusation of “casual gendering” would obviously be ridiculous, because Alexa has a popular female given name.