June 4, 2026

Bots wrote the code, humans wrote the drama

AI, Ashby Engineering, and the future

Ashby says AI writes most of its software, but commenters are roasting the product anyway

TLDR: Ashby says AI now writes over half its production software without causing a surge in customer issues, a big sign of how fast workplace AI is spreading. But commenters weren’t buying the victory lap, roasting the product, questioning the data, and dunking on a broken AI opt-out form.

Ashby came in with a bold claim: since August 2025, more than half of the code going into its live product has been written by artificial intelligence, and customer problems have stayed "broadly stable." Translation for non-tech readers: a hiring software company used by over 100,000 people a week says the bots are now doing a huge chunk of the typing, and business hasn’t exploded. The company’s message is basically, don’t panic — humans still matter, especially for judgment, taste, and understanding what customers actually need.

But the comments? Oh, the comments were not here to politely clap. One of the sharpest reactions came from a longtime user who said they almost wished the AI would take over the product decisions, because the current experience already feels chaotic. Another crowd favorite zeroed in on Ashby’s graph and said, hold on, that "small blip" after the AI shift looks more like a 30% jump, so maybe this victory lap is a little early. And then there was the painfully funny complaint from a job seeker who claimed Ashby offered an opt-out form for AI resume processing… except the form allegedly just spun forever. That one practically wrote its own punchline.

So while Ashby is selling a future where AI handles the boring stuff and humans bring the empathy, the community response is more like: cool story, but does the product actually feel better? On the discussion thread, the mood swung between skepticism, sarcasm, and "are they announcing layoffs or not?" Energy: somewhere between cautious curiosity and a full-on side-eye.

Key Points

  • Ashby says that since August 2025, more than half of new code deployed to production has been AI-generated.
  • The article states that customer issues have remained broadly stable during the same period, despite customer growth and increased AI-written code.
  • Ashby reports no observed regressions in code quality, engineering velocity, or engineer onboarding time, and says codebase comprehension may have improved anecdotally.
  • The company describes itself as talent acquisition software with over 100,000 weekly active users and millions of candidate applications per week.
  • The article outlines two operating principles for AI use in engineering: empathy cannot be replaced by AI, and engineers remain responsible for what they ship.

Hottest takes

"I suspect I’m not alone in wishing they’d let the AI make the technical and product decisions" — georgespencer
"The 'blip' post-AI is up ~30%" — nxrabl
"Submitting the form displayed a spinner and did nothing" — agentultra
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