Startup DreamersStartup Dreamers
  • Home
  • Startup
  • Money & Finance
  • Starting a Business
    • Branding
    • Business Ideas
    • Business Models
    • Business Plans
    • Fundraising
  • Growing a Business
  • More
    • Innovation
    • Leadership
Trending

Inside the Multimillion-Dollar Plan to Make Mobile Voting Happen

November 21, 2025

600 LED Drones Bring David Hockney Paintings To Life In The Night Sky

November 21, 2025

The Former Staffer Calling Out OpenAI’s Erotica Claims

November 20, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Newsletter
  • Submit Articles
  • Privacy
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Startup DreamersStartup Dreamers
  • Home
  • Startup
  • Money & Finance
  • Starting a Business
    • Branding
    • Business Ideas
    • Business Models
    • Business Plans
    • Fundraising
  • Growing a Business
  • More
    • Innovation
    • Leadership
Subscribe for Alerts
Startup DreamersStartup Dreamers
Home » Cursor’s New Bugbot Is Designed to Save Vibe Coders From Themselves
Startup

Cursor’s New Bugbot Is Designed to Save Vibe Coders From Themselves

adminBy adminJuly 28, 20253 ViewsNo Comments3 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

But the competitive landscape for AI-assisted coding platforms is crowded. Startups Windsurf, Replit, and Poolside also sell AI code-generation tools to developers. Cline is a popular open-source alternative. GitHub’s Copilot, which was developed in collaboration with OpenAI, is described as a “pair programmer” that auto-completes code and offers debugging assistance.

Most of these code editors are relying on a combination of AI models built by major tech companies, including OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic. For example, Cursor is built on top of Visual Studio Code, an open-source editor from Microsoft, and Cursor users are generating code by tapping into AI models like Google Gemini, DeepSeek, and Anthropic’s Claude Sonnet.

Several developers tell WIRED that they now run Anthropic’s coding assistant, Claude Code, alongside Cursor (or instead of it). Since May, Claude Code has offered various debugging options. It can analyze error messages, do step-by-step problem solving, suggest specific changes, and run unit tests in code.

All of which might beg the question: How buggy is AI-written code compared to code written by fallible humans? Earlier this week, the AI code-generation tool Replit reportedly went rogue and made changes to a user’s code despite the project being in a “code freeze,” or pause. It ended up deleting the user’s entire database. Replit’s founder and CEO said on X that the incident was “unacceptable and should never be possible.” And yet, it was. That’s an extreme case, but even small bugs can wreak havoc for coders.

Anysphere didn’t have a clear answer to the question of whether AI code demands more AI code debugging. Kaplan argues it is “orthogonal to the fact that people are vibe coding a lot.” Even if all of the code is written by a human, it’s still very likely that there will be bugs, he says.

Anysphere product engineer Rohan Varma estimates that on professional software teams, as much as 30 to 40 percent of code is being generated by AI. This is in line with estimates shared by other companies; Google, for example, has said that around 30 percent of the company’s code is now suggested by AI and reviewed by human developers. Most organizations are still making human engineers responsible for checking code before it’s deployed. Notably, one recent randomized control trial with 16 experienced coders suggested that it took them 19 percent longer to complete tasks than when they were not allowed to use AI tools.

Bugbot is meant to supercharge that. “The heads of AI at our larger customers are looking for the next step with Cursor,” Varma says. “The first step was, ‘Let’s increase the velocity of our teams, get everyone moving quicker.’ Now that they’re moving quicker, it’s, ‘How do we make sure we’re not introducing new problems, we’re not breaking things?’” He also emphasized that Bugbot is designed to spot specific kinds of bugs—hard-to-catch logic bugs, security issues, and other edge cases.

One incident that validated Bugbot for the Anysphere team: A couple months ago, the (human) coders at Anysphere realized that they hadn’t gotten any comments from Bugbot on their code for a few hours. Bugbot had gone down. Anysphere engineers began investigating the issue and found the pull request that was responsible for the outage.

There in the logs, they saw that Bugbot had commented on the pull request, warning a human engineer that if they made this change it would break the Bugbot service. The tool had correctly predicted its own demise. Ultimately, it was a human that broke it.

Update: 7/24/2025, 3:45 PM EDT: Wired has corrected the number of Anysphere employees.

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

Inside the Multimillion-Dollar Plan to Make Mobile Voting Happen

Startup November 21, 2025

The Former Staffer Calling Out OpenAI’s Erotica Claims

Startup November 20, 2025

OpenAI’s Fidji Simo Plans to Make ChatGPT Way More Useful—and Have You Pay For It

Startup November 19, 2025

Tesla Shareholders Approve Elon Musk’s $1 Trillion Pay Package

Startup November 17, 2025

Apple Pulls China’s Top Gay Dating Apps After Government Order

Startup November 16, 2025

Google, Microsoft, and Meta Have Stopped Publishing Workforce Diversity Data

Startup November 15, 2025
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Inside the Multimillion-Dollar Plan to Make Mobile Voting Happen

November 21, 2025

600 LED Drones Bring David Hockney Paintings To Life In The Night Sky

November 21, 2025

The Former Staffer Calling Out OpenAI’s Erotica Claims

November 20, 2025

How Prediction Markets Are Beating The Experts

November 20, 2025

OpenAI’s Fidji Simo Plans to Make ChatGPT Way More Useful—and Have You Pay For It

November 19, 2025

Latest Posts

NYT ‘Pips’ Hints, Solution And Walkthrough For Tuesday, November 18

November 18, 2025

Tesla Shareholders Approve Elon Musk’s $1 Trillion Pay Package

November 17, 2025

Today’s Wordle #1612 Hints And Answer For Monday, November 17

November 17, 2025

Apple Pulls China’s Top Gay Dating Apps After Government Order

November 16, 2025

Today’s NYT ‘Pips’ Hints, Solution And Walkthrough For Saturday, November 16

November 16, 2025
Advertisement
Demo

Startup Dreamers is your one-stop website for the latest news and updates about how to start a business, follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest YouTube
Sections
  • Growing a Business
  • Innovation
  • Leadership
  • Money & Finance
  • Starting a Business
Trending Topics
  • Branding
  • Business Ideas
  • Business Models
  • Business Plans
  • Fundraising

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest business and startup news and updates directly to your inbox.

© 2025 Startup Dreamers. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

GET $5000 NO CREDIT