- Linus Torvalds says he used AI only as part of a personal project, without real consequences
- The code had nothing to do with Linux, Git or any other production system
- AI helped with unfamiliar Python visuals, not main system or kernel logic
Linus Torvalds, the creator of Linux, has spent years pushing back against exaggerated claims around artificial intelligence, describing much of the AI conversation as being driven more by marketing than practical outcomes, and stating that he is much less interested in using AI to write code.
At the same time, Torvalds emphasized that he is not anti-AI in principle, but firmly opposed to the hype that often surrounds AI tools.
In this context, his recent admission that he used his self-described “vibe coding” in a personal project has attracted attention.
A leisure project, no infrastructure
The context of this decision matters, however. The code in question appears in AudioNoise, a small personal repository that Torvalds himself calls a “dumb guitar pedal-related project.”
It generates random digital audio effects and is not part of the Linux kernel, Git, or any other widely deployed systems.
Torvalds has previously said that ambiance coding is “okay” if you’re not using it for anything important – and it looks like this project closely matches his description.
Torvalds’ README explains why an AI coding tool came into the picture: the Python visualization component was outside of its comfort zone.
In similar situations in the past, Torvalds said he would copy fragments from threads or Stack Overflow and tweak them until they worked. This time he skipped that process and used Google Antigravity to generate the viewer directly.
In this sense, the tool functioned less as a creative engine and more as a similar shortcut to the familiar productivity tools that developers already rely on.
The broader developer community remains divided, with some worried that developers will become obsolete if AI can code — and others questioning how much, if any, trust AI-generated code deserves.
Torvalds’ past comments reflect limited use. For him, AI is a tool for learning to code, automated patch checking and code review.
“How do I feel about all the code I’ve written that’s been ingested by LLMs? I feel good about being a part of it, because I see it as a continuation of what I’ve been trying to do my whole life: democratize code, systems, knowledge,” Torvalds wrote.
“LLMs will help us write better software, faster, and give small teams a chance to compete with big companies. The same thing that open source software did in the 90s.”
He noted that such systems have detected problems that he missed, but that doesn’t endorse the AI’s written code for base systems.
Even though people argue online, Torvalds was simply experimenting while on vacation. The episode suggests pragmatism rather than a change in philosophy.
Via ArsTechnica
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