I would wager quite a lot that less than one out of every ten executives could properly explain what an SQL injection is, or even know the term at all. They would not write a prompt like this.
I worked for one executive who read an article about APIs and came to me and told me to start using APIs. In 2010. I told him it sounded good and I would look into it.
My exec asked “how is the ODBC coming?” We were a Linux shop. Also we weren’t, like, doing anything near the type of work that… it still baffles me. After a beat I said “good.”
Absolutely true, but executives kind of understand prompts whereas they don’t understand programming at all.
I would wager quite a lot that less than one out of every ten executives could properly explain what an SQL injection is, or even know the term at all. They would not write a prompt like this.
I worked for one executive who read an article about APIs and came to me and told me to start using APIs. In 2010. I told him it sounded good and I would look into it.
My exec asked “how is the ODBC coming?” We were a Linux shop. Also we weren’t, like, doing anything near the type of work that… it still baffles me. After a beat I said “good.”