Why Your AI-Improved Code Feels Wrong

Uploaded: 2026-03-02
The video discusses the concept of ‘intent erosion’ in software development, highlighting how AI optimizations can inadvertently strip away the emotional quality and personal touch inherent in code, leading to products that are functionally improved but emotionally flat. It emphasizes the need for developers to consciously encode and communicate their intent throughout the software development process to preserve the original vision.

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This video warns that automated AI-driven code improvements can erode the original human intention encoded in software, removing emotional qualities while improving functionality. It explains how incremental, autonomous fixes accumulate into ‘intent erosion,’ why current processes don’t protect intent, and offers three practical habits—encode intent in the codebase, ensure builders encounter it, and lead with purpose—to preserve design and brand voice as systems evolve.

What intent is: The invisible “why” behind design choices—the feelings, brand voice and user experience that aren’t captured by specs or tests.
How erosion occurs: Many small, reasonable AI-driven optimizations accumulate and remove human-encoded intent without breaking functionality, producing software that’s functionally better but emotionally flatter.
Where current processes fail: Intent isn’t stored, tested, or audited; automated edits won’t see the purpose behind trade-offs and will optimize it away.
Practical habits: Embed intent in the codebase, put that intent in the path of anyone (or any AI) making changes, and lead requests with purpose rather than feature-only specs.

Quotes:

Every time AI improves your code, it scrapes off a little bit of what made it yours.

Death by a thousand optimizations: functionally better, emotionally flatter.

Your intent is the soul of the thing you’re making. Don’t let it evaporate.

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Upload date:2026-03-02
Likes:205
Comments:44
Statistics updated:2026-03-29

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Why Your AI-Improved Code Feels Wrong
Why Your AI-Improved Code Feels Wrong