and no one irl even has the decency to agree with me because it’s so fucking drilled into the culture that these fucking BuNsInNesSes have a Right to do this because it’s a bSUsniEss. like oh yeah they have an office building so they definitely get to analyze my piss because they say they want to. sick fucking freaks.

preaching to the choir a bit on lemmy (or i would hope so at least) but still

  • CephaloPOTUS@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Wow you are exactly what he is complaining about. It’s not like the guy is coding live and each keystroke goes directly to the machine. What risk is it to people if a couple years ago one of the guys typing keys that would later get tested like crazy was high?

    • hardaysknight@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I mean, there are applications where that could be the case. I program PLC’s for a living. Sometimes on live machines running in a plant.

      I don’t agree with his overall viewpoint, but he does have a point in this case.

      • AMDIsOurLord
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        1 year ago

        If you’re committing on live then I have some choice words for the company you work for and the practices you’ve been taught

    • Iceblade@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Cheese theory. You want as many layers of protection between creation and execution. Bugs will inevitably slip through tests, and reducing the number that are created before testing will inherently reduce the number that slip through. In some fields preventing just one bug might save many lives.

      I would not limit it to coders however - a lawyer screwing up their defense, a coked up billion dollar CEO disregarding the wider effects of a major decision, an insurance agent making a wrong decision etc. etc.

      The irony is that people higher up in the chain of command, whose decisions affect far more people, often slip by without being tested whilst the bottom-feeder who gets fired after a fuckup that affects a single person is hounded to the ends of the earth.