Coinbase 首席执行官解释了他解雇不立即尝试人工智能的工程师的原因。
Coinbase CEO explains why he fired engineers who didn't try AI immediately

原始链接: https://techcrunch.com/2025/08/22/coinbase-ceo-explains-why-he-fired-engineers-who-didnt-try-ai-immediately/

Coinbase 首席执行官布莱恩·阿姆斯特朗采取了一项严厉措施,以确保他的工程团队采用像 GitHub Copilot 和 Cursor 这样的人工智能编码助手。在购买了企业许可证后,阿姆斯特朗对预测的缓慢采用率感到惊讶。他发布了一项全公司范围的指令,要求工程师在一周内开始使用这些工具,并威胁说,如果不遵守,将举行周六会议——最终,将解雇不配合者。 尽管承认这种做法“过于强硬”,阿姆斯特朗解雇了少数几个没有充分理由拒绝使用的工程师,从而明确传达了公司对人工智能的承诺。此后,Coinbase 将重点放在人工智能工具的培训和知识共享上。 这一事件引发了争论,Stripe 的约翰·科利森质疑长期维护人工智能生成的代码库的可行性,阿姆斯特朗也承认了这种担忧。这个故事凸显了开发人员面临的日益增长的拥抱人工智能的压力,即使人们仍然对其对代码质量和可维护性的影响存在疑问。

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原文

It’s hard to find programmers these days who aren’t using AI coding assistants in some capacity, especially to write the repetitive, mundane bits.

But those who refused to try the tools when Coinbase bought enterprise licenses for GitHub Copilot and Cursor got promptly fired, CEO Brian Armstrong said this week on John Collison’s podcast “Cheeky Pint.” (Collison is the co-founder and president of the payments company Stripe.)

After getting licenses to cover every engineer, some at the cryptocurrency exchange warned Armstrong that adoption would be slow, predicting it would take months to get even half the engineers using AI. 

Armstrong was shocked at the thought. “I went rogue,” he said, and posted a mandate in the company’s main engineering Slack channel. “I said, ‘AI is important. We need you to all learn it and at least onboard. You don’t have to use it every day yet until we do some training, but at least onboard by the end of the week. And if not, I’m hosting a meeting on Saturday with everybody who hasn’t done it and I’d like to meet with you to understand why.’” 

At the meeting, some people had reasonable explanations for not getting their AI assistant accounts set up during the week, like being on vacation, Armstrong said.

“I jumped on this call on Saturday and there were a couple people that had not done it. Some of them had a good reason, because they were just getting back from some trip or something, and some of them didn’t [have a good reason]. And they got fired.”

Armstrong admits that it was a “heavy-handed approach” and there were people in the company who “didn’t like it.”

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While it doesn’t sound like very many people were fired, Armstrong said it sent a clear message that AI is not optional. Still, everything about that story is wild: that there were engineers who wouldn’t spend a few minutes of their week signing up for and testing the AI assistant — the most hyped tech for coders ever — and that Armstrong was willing to fire them over it.

Coinbase did not respond to a request for comment.

Since then, Armstrong has leaned further into the training. He said the company hosts monthly meetings where teams who have mastered creative ways to use AI share what they have learned.

Interestingly, Collison, who has been programming since childhood, questioned how much companies should be relying on AI-generated code.

“It’s clear that it is very helpful to have AI helping you write code. It’s not clear how you run an AI-coded code base,” he commented. Armstrong replied, “I agree.”

Indeed, as TechCrunch previously reported, a former OpenAI engineer described that company’s central code repository as “a bit of a dumping ground.” The engineer said management had begun dedicating engineering resources to improve the situation.

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