But I fear you’ll be working a lot of weekends, planning lots of migrations as you become furious at each successive provider.
I don’t imagine most company’s have employees making blog posts blaming victims. But I could be wrong. Most things definitely can/should be let go, but some things deserve to be outraged over.
If it helps any, I think the writing on the blog is some of the best tech writing on the web (hack post included). It absolutely zips from the screen; it’s fresh, it’s sassy, and it’s interesting. It’s why I’ve been grumbling about the Infra Log being abandoned.
See, maybe I’m just a failed writer. It’s why I’m a software engineer instead.
If it helps any, I think the writing on the blog is some of the best tech writing on the web (hack post included). It absolutely zips from the screen; it’s fresh, it’s sassy, and it’s interesting. It’s why I’ve been grumbling about the Infra Log being abandoned.
See, maybe I’m just a failed writer. It’s why I’m a software engineer instead.
I would actually (mostly) agree. This one however just hits different. I have a real problem with how flippant they were about something that realistically may have cost someone so real money.
I would like to think their audience is tech savvy enough to realize what was up. But I would also like to think Kurt is tech savvy enough to not fall for a phish. But we are all human and that means we make mistakes.
I know people who have lost basically everything to other online scams and feel bad for anyone who might have against better judgement fell for the underlying crypto scam here.
I expected better of them to make light of the serious issue at hand here.