The CEO leaned across the table, got in my face, and said, "this is a MONUMENTAL fuck up."
It certainly was -- on multiple levels, but ultimately up at the C-level. Blaming a single person (let a lone a junior engineer) for it just perpetuates the inbred culture of clusterfuckitude and cover-ass-ery which no doubt was the true root cause of the fuck-up in the first place.
Not to try to temper your frustration (which is quite legitimate), but in this context, "we're looking for a different skill set" is almost certainly a foil. Quite often companies will say things like that when really they mean they were just fundamentally disappointed in you for reasons X or Y they would find too awkward or risky to disclose to you.
Have to agree here. If you got to the onsite interview then there is a high likelyhood they thought there might be a fit.
This has been discussed before but basically telling a candidate that you passed on them for a specific reason is seen as an invitation to argue the point, so people say something like 'wrong skill set.' Easier just to move along and not worry about it too much.
Almost by definition, anyone who really is a badass, rockstar, ninja, etc. at what they do is viscerally repelled by the cockiness exuding from job ads seeking people who describe themselves as such... and would never dream of applying for such jobs.
Well, there's the cockiness, but there's also the fact that many times those words are code for "slave". My first job was like that. They advertised for "rockstar" .Net programmers. Only, in this case, "rockstar" apparently meant "willing to work 18 hour days for no extra pay or benefits save the manager telling you how awesome you are and how much money you're saving the company". Ever since that, I've looked at job postings looking for "rockstars" or "ninjas" with a jaundiced eye.
We've asked Amazon why the ads are US-only, and whether customers can pay to turn them off. If there is such an option, it doesn't seem to be mentioned in the Kindle Fire announcements or the Amazon sales pages. The prices are quite good, though, beating or matching the prices of tablets of comparable sizes.
...and pretty soon, before you know it in fact, we won't be able to power them down, either. Or disconnect the cameras or mikes.
"But hey, they're only $40 now, and the retina displays are just fantastic..."
"It was terribly dangerous to let your thoughts wander when you were in any public place or within range of a telescreen. The smallest thing could give you away. A nervous tic, an unconscious look of anxiety, a habit of muttering to yourself--anything that carried with it the suggestion of abnormality, of having something to hide. In any case, to wear an improper expression on your face...; was itself a punishable offense. There was even a word for it in Newspeak: facecrime..."
Vandalising cameras is not (IMO) a valid response.
These cameras are put up with the intention of protecting life / liberty / property. Perfectly valid and laudable aims in a democracy.
The problem is that the uses of the systems can become subverted and spiral downwards, through lack of controls and oversight.
As an example imagine cameras and software to identify sudden violent actions in a street, flag the incident for review, follow all the involved people as they walk down different streets switching cameras intelligently.
That seems a good thing.
Bad thing: not knowing you were being monitored last night and upon review nothing violent actually happened.
Badder thing: not knowing you are being monitored as part of a skin-color recognition innovation.
Badderer things: oh lots, but all about technologies being used outside of strict, "just cause" reasons.
The existence of the cameras is not the problem. It's how we use the output of them. Vandalising cameras without putting in place (legislative) checks around the use of surveillance devices is short sighted Luddism - so not a valid response
That's like saying "Guns don't kill people, people kill people." even though death by speeding bullet is more prevalent where guns are legal. Guns and cameras should be used only where a credible strategical benefit exists. Right now, they're often part of a scare tactic and thus oppresses the people confronted by them. One has to ask whether their output is relevant at all before questioning the usage of said output.
So I think you are suggesting imposing a ban on cameras like here in UK bans guns. That is one approach and maybe effective however I feel that there are public good to be derived from surveillance tech, that if the govt has cameras to enable those benefits we still need to manage that and the difficulties of enforcing such a ban for civilian usesuggest to me that mitigating the
existence of cameras through open access is simplest approach
I wasn't even suggesting guns should be banned everywhere (although they should), let alone cameras. Open access doesn't mitigate the problem, it'd merely replaces one problem with another. Similarly, publicising requests for footage could be detrimental to law enforcement agencies who are trying to help protect fellow citizens.
Since crime will always exist and criminals will always one-up law enforcement, it's in our best interests to always use the least possible countermeasures. Time will tell when we've reached 1984, society seems to drift closer and closer — albeit, ever so slowly.
Yup, because this time it is facial recognition technology. What if it is mind-reading technology in 20 years time? If you don't draw the line in cement instead of sand at some point such as now with facial recognition technology, it will be redrawn over and over and over again.
Given that several the hacker community here familiar with dystopian future literature accepts this as inevitable in many comments, suggests that a slippery slope argument is not in the least bit far fetched.
If here there are people are accepting, then in other areas of society there are people actively arguing in favor of using facial recognition technology everywhere. Those same people will probably be arguing for equivalent of telescreens once something akin to them are invented.
There exist algorithms for estimating emotion from facial video. The accuracy is kind of hit or miss, but it's enough for "he's experiencing anxiety during the security search, he must be a terrorist."
Once you can download an isotope separator or a plague kit, privacy concerns become moot. The societies not running under total AI supervision will simply go extinct. So the question is what kind of supervised society do you want?
No, but having young fresh out of college developers prefer it over eclipse/VS, is new (to me), but I have a very narrow point of view of only the people I know from college / work / online.
Interesting article, but the title should probably be "How stock market decimalization killed IPOs and saved our economy."
That is, whatever the cause-and-effect relationship between decimalization and IPOs, it's a bit fatuous to maintain that outsize IPOs are, by themselves, "good" for the economy.
It certainly was -- on multiple levels, but ultimately up at the C-level. Blaming a single person (let a lone a junior engineer) for it just perpetuates the inbred culture of clusterfuckitude and cover-ass-ery which no doubt was the true root cause of the fuck-up in the first place.