Eric Su
248 posts

Eric Su
@EricSuNet
Writing what I learned. Generalist with exp in internet marketing, investment banking, payment sales, and software engineering
wifi Se unió Şubat 2026
272 Siguiendo30 Seguidores

15 signs your AI-generated code is a TICKING BOMB in production :
1/ it works perfectly in development
> 90% of AI-generated bugs only show up under real traffic conditions
2/ the AI never asked about your database size
> a query that runs in 0.2s on 500 rows takes 45s on 500,000
3/ you havent tested what happens when a third party API goes down
> your whole app probably crashes instead of failing gracefully
4/ there are no loading states in the UI
> users click the button 6 times because nothing happened visually
5/ the AI wrote your auth flow in one shot and you didnt review it
> authentication is the single highest-risk part of any application
6/ file uploads have no size limit
> one user uploads a 2GB file and your server runs out of memory
7/ you have no staging environment
> you are testing in production and you dont even know it
8/ the AI used setTimeout to "fix" a timing issue
> that is not a fix. that is a bomb with a delay.
9/ there is no form of abuse detection
> bots will find your signup form before real users do
10/ your error messages tell users exactly what went wrong technically
> "PostgreSQL connection refused at port 5432" is a gift to attackers
11/ the AI picked a library that hasnt been updated in 2 years
> abandoned packages are one of the most common attack vectors
12/ you have no caching layer
> every page load hits your database directly, every single time
13/ mobile experience was never tested
> AI codes for desktop by default. most of your users are on phones.
14/ there is no user feedback mechanism
> your app is breaking for people right now and you have no way of knowing
15/ you have shipped but never done a security audit
> not even a basic one. not even running your code through a linter.
Bookmark this and make it into a skill
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@jerallaire Yes the impact of AI cannot be understated.
It helped us understand within seconds your USDC freeze of 16 hot wallets for a NY civil case was complete nonsense.
The Circle team seemingly overlooked the incorrect tracing and decided to harm all of the various businesses.



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My 7-minute download on the impact of AI on the economy, labor and our political and economic system. Excerpt from Economic Club of New York:
youtube.com/watch?v=yy_6qg…

YouTube
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@HappyGezim my mistake is always opening up my openclaw group or x lol. too many tools and toys
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@EricSuNet 100%. started with email triage and it was the gateway drug. one workflow that actually worked > ten half-baked experiments every time
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@matteopelleg I'd watch human written scripts + human prompted movies though. Of course it will have to be good.
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@SolanaFloor @solana how does polkadbot still have 9000 devs?? this is got to be wrong.
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🚨BREAKING: @Solana overtook Ethereum in all-time unique developers, now leading all chains.
Source: chainspect

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@SimonHoiberg And learn designs. Learn good UX. Learn how to describe things in English.
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Learning to code still makes sense.
Just not for the same reasons it used to.
Back then, "learn to code" was mostly about:
→ Shipping products from scratch.
→ Getting a high-paying dev job.
→ Becoming the "10x engineer".
Today, AI covers most of that.
You can build an MVP from a prompt, ship a SaaS in days, and get usable code for almost anything.
So why bother learning to code now?
Because the real advantage has shifted to independence and sovereignty.
In the next few years, we'll see a ridiculous amount of new products being launched.
And 99% of them will be completely tied to OpenAI, Claude, AWS, Vercel, Supabase, etc. They will follow whatever these platforms decide.
Right now is your chance to be in the 1% that is different.
Learn Docker.
Learn Kubernetes.
Learn Bash.
Learn Linux.
Use this opportunity to take back control and stop letting someone else own the ground you’re building on.
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@eglyman We made it super easy and simple for non-tech and casual users to install, manage, create workflows with OpenClaw agents and other similar agentic platforms(Adding Hermes). You don't even need a laptop.
clawluv.com
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We only hire builders (and we’re on a hiring spree)!
Reply with something you've built. I'll read them personally. We’re interviewing the best ones.
You’ll be a good fit if you:
- work best without permission
- default to “how could I automate this”
- had weird teenage hobbies
- spend your sunday making side projects
- have more Claude agents than cousins
- shipped something this week
- make prototypes, not powerpoints
- don’t like hierarchy
- are good at games: chess, monopoly, poker
- would take dinner with Elon over $100k
Good luck,
Eric
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@ashen_one give it to a children education center or something similar.
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Model Agnostic
clem 🤗@ClementDelangue
After @Pinterest @Airbnb @NotionHQ @cursor_ai, today it’s @eoghan @intercom publicly sharing that they’re finding it better, cheaper, faster to use and train open models themselves rather than use APIs for many tasks. And hundreds of other companies are doing the same without sharing. Ultimately, I believe the majority of AI workflows will be in-house based on open-source (vs API). It took much more time than we anticipated but it’s happening now!
Català

@s_chiriac The easiest way to install and manage OpenClaw. You don't even need a laptop. Adding Hermes Agent too. clawluv.com
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