However, as staffers at major video game developer Electronic Arts — which is behind some of the biggest franchises in the industry, from “The Sims” to “Battlefield” — told Business Insider, their employer’s attempts to shoehorn AI into everyday tasks are seriously backfiring.

Some staffers told the outlet that the AI tools they’re encouraged to use produce flawed code, among other hallucinations that need to be addressed.

In other words, the tech may be creating more work, not less — which doesn’t bode well for an industry that’s already infamous for its crunch culture and high turnover rate.

  • DarkCloud@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    You end up just telling the AI exactly what you want in excruciating detail, and it still might not get it right (it probably won’t).

    It’s more like the AI is promoting you to just write the code.