Software engineering has shifted from a craft to a factory floor where humans no longer read or write code. On Lenny's Podcast, Simon Willison declared we've passed an inflection point where AI agents produce reliable code. His rule: nobody types code, nobody reads it. Companies like StrongDM now run automated QA swarms that test software 24/7 using AI agents that simulate employees chatting in fake Slack channels.
This automation is eroding the traditional career ladder. Mid-level engineers are most vulnerable - they lack the senior experience to guide multiple agents but can no longer differentiate themselves through basic execution speed. Seniors like Willison find themselves managing four agents in parallel, a cognitive load that exhausts them by 11:00 a.m. Juniors benefit from accelerated onboarding - Cloudflare and Shopify hired 1,000 interns in 2025 because AI assistants reduced training from a month to a week.
The technical moats that protected startups have evaporated. On This Week in Startups, Marek Hazan revealed his company Felt Sense used AI agents to rebuild 20% of Y Combinator's Winter 2026 batch autonomously. He found these startups were composed of 'basically the same sorts of components,' making them trivial to replicate. Jason Calacanis called this a 'bucket of cold water' for founders who rely on technical differentiation alone.
Bitcoin pioneer Martti Malmi confirmed the trend on No Solutions. When asked how much he codes by hand, he replied 'Basically zero.' The release of Claude Opus gave him a 10x-100x productivity boost, allowing small teams to build protocols that once required engineering armies. His concern now is economic: AI will make white-collar and computer science jobs obsolete before blue-collar labor.
The defense has shifted from code to data and physical constraints. Hazan argues startups now need proprietary data, regulatory hurdles, or hardware - anything AI can't vibe-code in a weekend. The regulatory risk became stark with Medvi, a two-person company using AI tools to generate fake doctors and misleading ads for pharmaceuticals, now facing FDA scrutiny despite $1.8 billion in projected sales.
Calacanis sees this as peak bubble behavior, where automated systems prioritize speed over substance until regulation intervenes. The question for engineers isn't whether agents will replace them, but which tasks will remain human when code generation costs approach zero.
Marek Hazan, This Week in Startups:
- We found that 10 to 20% of the batch was pretty highly replicable and was composed of basically the same sorts of components.
- Building agentic founders felt like something that people would not even be able to debate that AI can take your job.
Simon Willison, Lenny's Podcast:
- Today probably 95% of the code that I produce, I didn't type it myself.
- The next rule though is nobody reads the code.


