On the other hand, it seriously sucks to spend time learning a big codebase and modifying it with care, only to not be given the time of day when you send the patches to the maintainers. Sometimes the reward for this human labor isn't a sincere peer review of the work and a productive back-and-forth to iron out issues before merging, it's to watch one's work languish unnoticed for a long time only for the maintainer to show up after the fact and write his own fix or implementation while giving you a shout out in the commit message if you're lucky.
Can't really blame people for reducing their level of effort. It's very easy to put in a lot of effort and end up with absolutely nothing to show for it. Before AI came along, my realization was that begging the maintainers to implement the features I wanted was the right move. They have all the context and can do it better than us in a fraction of the time it'd take us to do it. Actually cloning someone else's repository and working on it should only be attempted if one is willing to literally fork it and own the project should things go south. Now that we have AI, it's actually possible to easily understand and modify complex codebases, and I simply cannot find the will to blame people for using it to the fullest extent. Getting the AI to maintain the fork is really easy too.