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lifisyesterday at 2:43 PM4 repliesview on HN

It's the usual problem of having no consequences for the person who wrote catastrophic code like this and the company who released it. If the person who wrote this were to be imprisoned for the rest of their life, for instance, or if the company were to be fined $1 million per user put at risk (which would probably mean a $1-10 trillion fine for Google -enough to trigger bankruptcy), then things would be very different


Replies

StilesCrisisyesterday at 2:55 PM

If this rule were implemented, would you be walking free right now? Think it over.

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hombre_fatalyesterday at 3:55 PM

We should roll this out for everything.

Someone T-bones you in parking lot, chef causes food poisoning, plumber's leak floods your bathroom, personal trainer pushes to injury, mislabeled allergen on food, movers break your armoire, roofer leaves a leak -- I bet we'd see a lot less of all that if a $1MM fine + life in jail loomed over everyone.

Nobody would want to do business, but boy would we be in a golden age.

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akerstenyesterday at 2:51 PM

> If the person who wrote this were to be imprisoned for the rest of their life [...] then things would be very different

Yes, they certainly would. You wouldn't have smartphones, for instance.

I can't tell if this is satirical or not. But there are so many takes like this recently (hold the website liable for user content, hold the corporate developer liable for zero days in a project they happened to touch) that would all result in the same outcome (no more product at all) that I can't help but wonder if there's some luddite psy-op trying desperately to bring us back to a pre-Internet era in any way they can...

XorNotyesterday at 2:48 PM

Yes...no one would write any code.

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