Can you specificy how AI has been used on this project?
I cannot. I’m not the dev.
Comment on HoneyWire: Open-source, zero-agent cyber canaries for your homelab (Thinkst/OpenCanary alternative)
rainwall@piefed.social 3 days agoLooks like the following from github:
Suite of Official HoneyWires: Includes native TCP Tarpit, Web Router Decoy, File Canary (FIM), ICMP Canary, and Network Scan Detector.
I don’t see any AI disclosure on github or here OP. Can you specificy how AI has been used on this project?
irmadlad@lemmy.world 3 days ago Can you specificy how AI has been used on this project?
I cannot. I’m not the dev.
andreicscs@lemmy.world 3 days ago
AI Disclosure: As a student and solo developer/maintainer, I used AI as a “junior dev” during project development to help accelerate boilerplate writing and documentation. All core architecture, system structure, and security logic were fully designed and implemented by me.
Ok, so see this AI Disclosure would be helpful in the original post. You’re going to get downvoted either way, but at least it’s upfront. Don’t take it personal, it’s just that there is a faction of very vocal anti-AI users here.
My 2p.
andreicscs@lemmy.world 3 days ago
I appreciate the feedback and the 2p! I definitely don’t take it personally. I completely understand the skepticism around AI in this community, which is why I don’t hide it. At the end of the day, the core engine, the distroless container architecture, and the threat model were entirely engineered by me. HoneyWire is fully open-source and transparent, so anyone is welcome to audit the codebase. I also have several other public, non-AI projects on my GitHub if anyone wants to vet my background. But fair point I’ll make sure to be more upfront about using it as a scaffolding tool in future posts
surewhynotlem@lemmy.world 1 day ago
“Artificial Intern” is the right way to use it to code.
Awesome. I have bookmarked it in my Projects folder. It does look rather intriguing.