I think the surprising aspect is rather how people are praising 80-90% accuracy as the next leap in technological advancement. Quality is already in decline, despite LLMs, and programming was always a discipline where correctness and predictability mattered. It's an advancement for efficiency, sure, but on the yet unknown cost of stability. I'm thinking about all simulations based on applied mathematical concepts and all the accumulated hours fixing bugs - there's now this certain aftertaste, sweet for some living their lives efficiently, but very bitter for the ones relying on stability.
You're completely correct, of course. The issue is that most people are not looking for quality, only efficiency. In particular, business owners don't care about sacrificing some correctness if it means they can fire slews of people. Worse, gullible "engineers" that should be the ones prioritizing correctness are so business-brainwashed themselves that they like wise slop up this nonsense at the expense of sacrificing their own concern for the only principles that even made the software business remotely close to being worthy of the title "engineering".