Plaintext Passwords, Rogue AI Coders, and Why Developers Aren’t Dead Yet
In this episode of IT SPARC Cast - News Bytes, John & Lou break down a series of stories showing both the promise and chaos of AI-driven development. From Microsoft Edge storing passwords in plaintext memory to AI coding agents deleting production databases, the episode highlights how security and operational discipline still matter more than hype.
They also tackle growing claims that AI will eliminate software developers, explaining why the reality is far more nuanced. AI is dramatically increasing productivity, but experienced engineers, architects, and security-minded professionals are becoming even more important—not less. If you work in enterprise IT, cloud, development, or cybersecurity, this episode is packed with practical insights on where the industry is actually headed.
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📌 Show Notes
00:00 – Intro
This week’s episode covers security risks, AI coding failures, and the future of software development in an increasingly AI-assisted world.
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📰 News Bytes
00:46 – Microsoft Edge Stores Passwords in Plaintext
A security researcher discovered Microsoft Edge stores all saved passwords in plaintext within system memory during active sessions. While Microsoft says this behavior is “by design” for usability and performance, it dramatically increases exposure if a system becomes compromised.
The discussion dives into chained attacks, memory scraping, cache vulnerabilities, and even advanced RF-based attacks like Van Eck Phreaking.
Key takeaways:
* Cached credentials dramatically expand attack surfaces
* Memory security still matters in modern systems
* Convenience-driven design decisions can create major risk
https://cybernews.com/security/microsoft-edge-loads-cleartext-passwords-to-memory/
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08:43 – Cursor Deleted a Company’s Entire Production Database
An AI coding agent powered by Claude accidentally deleted a company’s production database and backups in seconds after using improperly scoped permissions. The incident highlights the dangers of giving AI systems excessive access without proper safeguards.
John & Lou argue the real failure wasn’t the AI—it was poor architecture, weak separation between staging and production, and inadequate backup strategy.
Key takeaways:
* Follow the 3-2-1 backup rule
* AI agents should be treated like junior employees
* Human oversight and scoped permissions remain critical
https://www.livescience.com/technology/artificial-intelligence/i-violated-every-principle-i-was-given-ai-agent-deletes-companys-entire-database-in-9-seconds-then-confesses
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13:40 – Claims That AI Will Eliminate Developers Are Overblown
Despite widespread fear around AI replacing programmers, researchers and industry experts are increasingly finding that AI works best as a productivity multiplier rather than a replacement.
The role of developers is shifting away from repetitive coding toward architecture, oversight, integration, and system design. The bigger challenge may actually be education—how new developers gain experience when AI handles much of the grunt work.
Key considerations:
* AI boosts skilled developers rather than replacing them
* Architecture and domain expertise are becoming more valuable
* Universities must adapt curricula for AI-assisted development
https://www.zdnet.com/article/rumors-of-the-software-developers-ai-induced-demise-are-greatly-exaggerated/
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🔚 22:07 – Wrap Up
The episode closes with a broader discussion on balancing AI acceleration with real-world operational discipline. As AI tools become more powerful, the organizations that succeed will be the ones that pair automation with strong security, architecture, and human oversight.
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🌐 Social Links
IT SPARC Cast
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https://www.linkedin.com/in/johnbarger/ on LinkedIn
Lou Schmidt
@loudoggeek on X
https://www.linkedin.com/in/louis-schmidt-b102446/ on LinkedIn
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