Tag
vibe coding
Vibe coding is the practice of turning prompts, voice, or plain-language ideas into apps and prototypes quickly. The real issue is not generation speed, but review, testing, permissions, and runtime boundaries that determine whether AI-built software is safe to ship.
8 articles

Apple Blocks Vibe Coding Apps on the App Store
Apple is rejecting vibe coding apps over code-downloading rules, and startups like Replit and Anything are pushing back.

Vibe Coding and Agentic Engineering Are Blurring
Simon Willison says AI coding tools are making vibe coding and agentic engineering harder to separate in real software work.

Why vibe coding is broken until security comes first
Vibe coding is shipping insecure software by default, and Lovable’s crisis proves the category needs security before scale.

Lovable brings vibe coding to iPhone and Android
Lovable’s AI app builder is now on iPhone and Android, even after Apple tightened rules around vibe-coding apps.

AI coding is fast. Trust is the bottleneck
AI coding tools are shipping faster than humans can review them, pushing enterprises toward code governance, testing, and trust layers.

Cursor CEO warns vibe coding builds shaky software
Cursor CEO Michael Truell says skipping code review with AI makes software brittle, while Cursor keeps engineers in the loop.

Apple Removes Anything as Vibe Coding Scrutiny Grows
Apple pulled Anything from the App Store after rejecting a browser-preview update, citing rules against apps that download or run code.

Vibe coding is changing who can build software
Harvard’s Karen Brennan says vibe coding may make software creation widely accessible, while raising new questions about quality, ethics, and skill.