this post was submitted on 12 Dec 2025
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I have a boss who tells us weekly that everything we do should start with AI. Researching? Ask ChatGPT first. Writing an email or a document? Get ChatGPT to do it.

They send me documents they "put together" that are clearly ChatGPT generated, with no shame. They tell us that if we aren't doing these things, our careers will be dead. And their boss is bought in to AI just as much, and so on.

I feel like I am living in a nightmare.

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[–] yogthos@lemmy.ml 3 points 4 days ago (28 children)

We had a discussion about AI at work. Our consensus was that it doesn't matter how you want to do your work. What matters is the result, not the process. Are you writing clean code and on finishing tasks on time? That's the metric. How you get there is up to you.

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[–] Tyrq@lemmy.dbzer0.com 12 points 5 days ago

Just use it to generate the kind of work he does, so that you can prove his own worthlessness

[–] Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml 10 points 5 days ago

I work in IT, many of the managers are pushing it. Nothing draconian, there are a few true believers, but the general vibe is like everybody is trying to push it because they feel like they'll be judged if they don't push it.

Two of my coworkers are true believers in the slop, one of them is constantly saying he's been, "consulting with ChatGPT" like it's an oracle or something. Ironically, he's the least productive member of the team. It takes him days to do stuff that takes us a few hours.

[–] teawrecks@sopuli.xyz 10 points 5 days ago

I'm in software. The company gives us access and broadly states they'd like people to find uses for it, but no mandates. People on my team occasionally find uses for it, but we understand what it is, what it can do, and what it would need to be able to do for it to be useful. And usually it's not.

If I thought anyone sent me an email written with AI, I would ask them politely but firmly to never waste my time like that again. I find using AI for writing email to be highly disrespectful. If I worked at a company making a habit out of that, I would leave.

[–] BannedVoice@lemmy.zip 11 points 5 days ago (1 children)

The organization I work for uses it but they’re taking a very cautious approach to it, we are instructed to double, triple check everything AI generated. Only use specific tools they approve for work related matters as not to train LLMs on company data and slowly rolling out AI in specific areas before they’re more widely adopted.

[–] KingGordon@lemmy.world 8 points 5 days ago

Double and triple checking everything takes longer than just doing the work.

[–] lichtmetzger@discuss.tchncs.de 4 points 4 days ago (3 children)

I work for a small advertising agency as a web developer. I'd say is mixed. The writing team is pissed about AI, because of the SEO-optimized slop garbage that is ruining enjoyable articles on the internet. The video team enjoys it, because it's really easy to generate good (enough) looking VFX with it. I use it rarely. Mostly for mundane tasks and boilerplate code. I enjoy using my actual brain to solve coding problems.

Customers don't have a fucking clue, of course. If we told them that they need AI for some stupid reason, they would probably believe us.

The boss is letting us decide and not forcing anything upon us. If we believe our work is done better with it, we can go for it, but we don't have to. Good boss.

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[–] GissaMittJobb@lemmy.ml 9 points 5 days ago

We get encouraged to try out AI tools for various purposes to see where we can find value out of them, if any. There are some use-cases where the tech makes sense when wielded correctly, and in those cases I make use of it. In other cases, I don't.

So far, I suspect we may be striking a decent balance. I have however noticed a concern trend of people copy-pasting unfiltered slop as a response to various scenarios, which is obviously not helpful.

[–] prettygorgeous@aussie.zone 7 points 5 days ago

I vibe code from time to time because people sometimes demand quick results in an unachievable timeline. In saying that, I may use a LLM to generate the base code that provides a basic solution to what is needed and then I go over the code and review/refactor it line by line. Sometimes if time is severely pressed and the code is waaaay off a bare minimum, I'll have the LLM revise the code to solve some of the problem, and then I review, adjust, amend where needed.

I treat AI as a tool and (frustrating and annoying) companion in my work, but ultimately I review and adjust and amend (and sometimes refactor) everything. It's kind of similar to when you are reading code samples from websites, copying it if you can use it, and refactoring it for your app, except tailored a bit more to what you need already..

In the same token, I also prefer to do it all myself if I can, so if I'm not pressed for time, or I know it's something that I can do quickly, I'll do it myself.

[–] HobbitFoot@thelemmy.club 7 points 5 days ago

Some people are using it for work purposes when there isn't a major policy on it.

You can tell because the work is shit.

Not quite that extreme where I am but it is being thrust into any kind of strategy scenario with absolutely nothing to back it up. They are desperate to incorporate.

[–] Pipster@lemmy.blahaj.zone 9 points 5 days ago

Intolerable

[–] buttwater@hexbear.net 8 points 5 days ago

The incompetent coworkers who usually ask me to do things for them (data entry etc) are asking ai first. One of the boomer managers is regularly printing out Google's AI search result summaries as a basis for research and to write emails for him, which is impressively irresponsible. No top-down expectation to use, which is nice.

[–] NomenCumLitteris@lemmy.ml 6 points 5 days ago

My subordinate is quite proud at the code AI produces based off his prompts. I don't use AI personally, but it is surely a tool. Don't know why one would be proud at the work they didn't do and can't explain though. I have to manage the AI use to a "keep it simple" level. Use AI if there is a use case, not just because it is there to be used...

They just hopped onto the bandwagon pushing for copilot and SharePoint. Just in time as some states are switching to open source.

[–] Crotaro@beehaw.org 2 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

Disclaimer: I only started working at this company about three weeks ago, so this info may not be as accurate as I currently think it is.

I work in quality management and recently asked my boss what the current stance on AI is, since he mentioned quite early that he and his colleagues sometimes use ChatGPT and Copilot in conjunction to write up some text for process descriptions or info pages. They use it in research tasks, or, for example, to summarize large documents like government regulations, and they very often use it to rephrase texts when they can't think of a good way to word something. From his explanation, the company consensus seems to be that everyone has access to Copilot via our computers and if someone has, for example, a Kagi or Gemini or whatever subscription, we are absolutely allowed and encouraged to utilize it to its full potential.

The only rules seem to be to not blindly trust the AI output ever and to not feed it company sensitive information (and/or our suppliers/customers)

[–] thatradomguy@lemmy.world 5 points 5 days ago

Dumbass senior contract person and program managers are all for using copilot and I've caught several people using chatgpt as a search engine or at least that's what they tell me they think it is.

[–] VinesNFluff@pawb.social 5 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (1 children)

Surprisingly reasonable?

I was terrified that entering the corporate world would mean being surrounded by people who are obssessed with AI.

Instead like... The higher-ups seem to be bullish on it and how much money it'll make them (... And I don't mind because we get bonuses if the corp does well), but even they talk about how "if you just let AI do the job for you, you'll turn in bad quality work" and "AI just gets you started, don't rely on it"

We use some machine learning stuff in places, and we have a local chatbot model for searching through internal regulations. I've used Copilot to get some raw ideas which I cooked up into something decent later.

It's been a'ight.

[–] some_kind_of_guy@lemmy.world 4 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

This is the way. I honestly don't care how the execs think about ai or if they use it themselves, but don't force its usage on me. I've been touching computers since before some of them were born. For me it's just one extra tool that gets pulled out in very specific scenarios and used for a very short amount of time.

It's like the electric start on my snowblower - you don't technically need it, and it won't do the work for you, (so don't expect it to) but at the right time it can be extremely nice to have.

[–] Passerby6497@lemmy.world 8 points 5 days ago

I use chatgpt when I care to, and while I was given a subscription by work, I'm not actively encouraged to use it. I really only use it for researching problems that Google search is too seo poisoned to help me with, or debugging scripts. Past that it doesn't have much professional use for me, given how much time I spend validating output and insulting the AI for hallucinations and just generally being terrible at moderate tasks.

Basic data interpretation can be pretty great though. I've had it find a couple problems I missed after having it parse log files.

[–] morgan_423@lemmy.world 3 points 4 days ago

I use Excel at work, not in a traditional accounting sense, but my company uses it as an interface with one of our systems I frequently work with.

Rather than tediously search the main Excel sheets that get fed into that system for all of the data fields I have to fill in, I made separate Excel tools that consolidate all of that data, then use macros to put the data into the correct fields on the main sheets for me.

Occasionally I'll have to add new functionality to that sheet, so I'll ask AI to write the macro code that does what I need it to do.

Saves me from having to learn obscure VBA programming to perform a function that I do during .0001% of my work time, but that's about the extent of it. For now.

Of course most of what I do is white collar computer work, so I'm expecting that my current job likely has a two-year-or-less countdown on it before they decide to use AI to replace me.

[–] golden_zealot@lemmy.ml 7 points 5 days ago

The owner of the software company I work at openly said to a room full of multiple clients that he believed that AI is a bubble and that it is going fail, but nonetheless let them know the business would be adding an optional AI feature to one aspect of the software product for those who want it, and even at that it's not an LLM or anything, it's intended to try to speed up the re-creation of specific types of diagrams based on an input of the original diagrams.

There is no requirement or suggestion to use AI as an employee at my company, personal preference for how each person works is generally respected and everything goes through a few layers of review regardless. All the management cares about is that the work gets done somehow.

There's one dev who uses it for 1 or 2 things on rare occasions, no one else ever uses it.

[–] happybadger@hexbear.net 7 points 5 days ago

Thankfully it hasn't made it into my workplace yet. We have a quarterly newsletter that someone tried to submit ChatGPT slop to. It was immediately identified and rejected by the rest of the horticulturists. My bosses are the kind of people who only talk about plants in Latin so there's a big institutional focus on getting the right information from primary sources and then using multiple layers of expert review.

However, we're facing massive budget shortfalls over the next few years and I doubt that will get any better if the economy crashes. Outside of installing/maintaining plants, the bulk of the job is intellectual and creative labour that the public isn't even aware of. I can absolutely see my workplace hollowing out the job and not hiring based on expertise. Instead of five people with scientific degrees debating a space for an hour, at some point it's going to be someone who hasn't seen that space feeding words they can't pronounce into an LLM that doesn't understand what space is. On paper it will look great for the metrics admins and other departments track. In practice it will immediately ratfuck everything that makes our urban forest function and drive away the really rare pool of overqualified people we have.

[–] TheOneCurly@feddit.online 6 points 5 days ago

I hear there's some sort of AI mandate coming but no idea what it is yet. A few coworkers poke at chatGPT for basic coding questions. I will not use it for anything at this point. IT here is mostly useless contractors so they can't tell what we're doing and they can't make us do anything. My direct reporting chain will back me working how I want to work so I don't foresee any issues.

I fully recognize I'm in a highly privileged position that many others aren't. But I'm going to take full advantage and keep my sanity.

[–] hamid@crazypeople.online 2 points 4 days ago

I'm a consultant so I'm doing a lot of different things day to day. We use it to track meetings with the copilot facilitator and meeting recaps and next steps. It is pretty helpful in that regard and often matches the tasks I write for myself during the meeting.

I also have to support a wide arrange of different systems and I can't be an expert in all of them so it is helpful for generating short scripts and workflows if it is powershell one day, bash the next, exchange management etc. I do know powershell and bash scripting decently well and the scripts often need to be fixed but it is good at generating templates and starter scripts I flesh out as the need arises. At this point I've collected many of the useful ones I need in my repos and reuse them pretty often.

Lastly one of the companies I consult for uses machine learning to design medical implants and design and test novel materials and designs. That is pretty cool and I don't think they could do some of the stuff they're doing without machine learning. While still AI, it isn't really GPT style generative AI though, not sure if that is what you're asking.

[–] Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 4 days ago

The order is:
Use whatever tool is not malicious and doesnt attack customer data.

Most use (IMO) way too much AI. The first result (the google AI answer) is trusted and done.
No research done beyond that.

I purposefully blocked the AI answer in uBlock. I don't want any of that.
Besides that I use it on occassion to look for a word or reword my search query if I don't find or know what I am looking for.
Very useful for the "What was the name of X again? It does Y and Z" queries.
Also for Powershell scripting because it can give me examples on using it.

But every asnwer is double and tripple checked for accuracy.
Seen too much news about made up answers.

At home I usually only use it for bash scripting because I can't be bothered to learn that.

[–] abbadon420@sh.itjust.works 5 points 5 days ago

The splution seems obvious. Let ChatGPT do the work, while you look for employment elsewhere.

You get a LLM genrated email? You let the LLM respond to that email....

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