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marinsky roma
marinsky roma

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QA is dead 2005 vs 2015 vs 2025

Every couple of years, the same wave hits LinkedIn: "QA is being eliminated," "testers will be replaced," "QA teams are the first to go."

In 2025, the boogeyman is AI. Before that, it was shift-left. Before that - automation. Before that — Agile. The framing changes, the panic stays the same.

But here's the thing - none of this is new. Not even close.

2011 - Facebook had no dedicated QA team. Simon Stewart (creator of WebDriver) had already explained that developers owned quality. The Quora thread "Is it true that Facebook has no testers?" is from that era.

2012 - "How Google Tests Software" came out. Google had already transformed QA into Test Engineers and Software Engineers in Tools & Infrastructure. Developers owned their tests. The "traditional QA is dead" narrative was already in full swing.

2014 - Microsoft eliminated the SDET role during an 18,000-person layoff. Entire testing organizations were restructured overnight. Gergely Orosz documented this firsthand in "How Big Tech does QA."

2015 - ThoughtWorks published "Is QA Dead?" Yahoo cut its QA department entirely. Slashdot had a 500+ comment thread debating it. Elisabeth Hendrickson introduced "testing = checking + exploring" at OnAgile — addressing the exact same fear we see today.

2015 - Also the year the Slashdot thread "No More QA: Yahoo's Tech Leaders Say Engineers Are Better Off Coding With No Net" went viral. Read the comments. They could've been written yesterday.

That was a decade ago. QA didn't die. It adapted. Testers who evolved - survived and thrived. Those who didn't - struggled. Same as in every profession.

Fast-forward to today, and replace "automation" with "AI agents" - the script is identical. "QA will be replaced by AI." "You won't need testers anymore." "Your team will be cut in half."

And conveniently, there's always a tool to sell you right after the scare.
Here's what actually happens every single time: the panic fades, the roles evolve, and the people who understand systems, edge cases, risk, and user behavior remain indispensable. Because quality isn't a phase you bolt on — it's a mindset. No tool replaces that.

If you're a QA engineer reading yet another "your job is disappearing" post, relax. Learn, adapt, stay curious. But don't let recycled fear-mongering from people selling solutions make you question your value.

This conversation has been going in circles for 15 years. The only thing that changes is who profits from the panic.

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