So-called “vibe coding” with LLM-driven tools like Cursor Composer — a term coined by renowned computer scientist Andrej Karpathy — describes a hands-off approach to writing code using GenAI models, and it has really taken off recently. According to Y Combinator, one-quarter of the startups in its latest batch relies on AI to generate 95% of their codebases. But despite its apparent speed, is it truly the most efficient way of generating code? Could it leave companies with insecure code and rising levels of technical debt?
That’s the view…