Stake and Rope
Rsync, the file synchronization utility that has quietly underpinned essentially every backup system in the Unix and Linux world since the mid-nineties, shipped a release earlier this year with regressions affecting incremental backup workflows. Users digging through the commit history found dozens of commits attributed to "tridge and claude" — that's Andrew Tridgell, the project's creator and a foundational figure in open-source infrastructure, working alongside Anthropic's Claude. A GitHub post titled, with the expletive sanitized, "Please Do Not Vibe Fuck Up This Software" lit the fuse. The Register reported it this week. Tridgell responded with a Medium piece called "Rsync and Outrage" defending his process. Forty years of software engineering experience. Every commit reviewed personally. AI tooling adopted in response to a flood of AI-generated security reports consuming his maintenance time. The defense is the strongest possible version of the position — the original maintainer is also the reviewer, the usual AI-PR concerns about review capacity don't apply, the tool adoption was a rational response to real operational pressure. The panel takes the defense seriously and engages with it on its merits. And the backups have regressions. That's the transaction the panel keeps returning to. The maintainer's standing is intact, the process defense holds, the response to the security-report flood was reasonable, and the incremental backup paths broke. The standard objection to AI-assisted contributions in open source — review capacity — doesn't apply here. So if the regressions still happen, the conclusion has to be something else: the kind of code being produced is harder to review than the code being replaced, the rewrite was the wrong unit of work for the tool, or the test coverage gap was always there and got surfaced by being broken. None of those are character flaws. They're decisions that produced an outcome. And the outcome is that some number of people are going to find out their incremental backups don't restore at three in the morning when they try to. Source Article "Please do not vibe f$%& up this software": Broken backups spark AI coding row in rsync communit [https://www.theregister.com/ai-and-ml/2026/06/04/please-do-not-vibe-f-up-this-software-broken-backups-spark-ai-coding-row-in-rsync-project/5251189] — Carly Page, The Register, June 4, 2026 Panel * The Legacy Sysadmin * The DBA * The Startup Founder * The Goat Farmer's Counsel
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