
Microsoft's AI Morged a Famous Diagram. Nobody Checked Before Publishing.
Vincent Driessen drew his Git Flow diagram in 2010. It became one of the most reproduced images in software engineering — a color-coded branching model that showed up in textbooks, conference slides, and onboarding docs at thousands of companies. Driessen made it in Apple Keynote. He published it under Creative Commons. He would have said yes if anyone asked. Fifteen years later, Microsoft's Learn portal published an AI-generated copy. The arrows pointed in wrong directions. The colors were off. And the label read "continvuocly morged." Not "continuously merged." Continvuocly morged. The word "Time" became "Tim." Feature branches became "featue" branches. The diagram's careful visual hierarchy — developed over weeks by a human who understood what each arrow meant — was fed through what appears to be a diffusion model and excreted as a bitmap with hallucinated text. Driessen found out when people on Bluesky started tagging him. His response was measured but pointed: a trillion-dollar co
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