grey_maniac
@grey_maniac@lemmy.ca
- Comment on Whatever happened to the blockchain/smart contract 'revolution' we were told about? 6 days ago:
trackerware corporations couldn’t maintain their monetization stranglehold
- Comment on Force is the last refuge of the incompetent 3 weeks ago:
Force is also the last refuge of the disenfranchised. Sometimes leading to guillotines.
- Comment on Google’s Sergey Brin Says Engineers Should Work 60-Hour Weeks in Office to Build AI That Could Replace Them 5 months ago:
Another great example of why engineers should not be in charge of people, nor people’s wellbeing.
- Comment on Jamie Dimon popped off at the 1,200+ JPMorgan employees fighting against full-time RTO: 'I don’t care how many people sign that petition' 5 months ago:
That would be the CEO list.
- Comment on Jamie Dimon popped off at the 1,200+ JPMorgan employees fighting against full-time RTO: 'I don’t care how many people sign that petition' 5 months ago:
Another name for the list, it seems.
- Comment on [deleted] 7 months ago:
Exactly. If you’re paying me from 8:00-5:00 I am starting at exactly 8:00. If my computer takes 5 minutes to boot, connect, etc., that starts happening at 8:00. If you want me online and responsive at 8:00, then you have to pay me for the boot time before 8:00. No pay, no work.
- Comment on Like Elon Musk, 1 in 3 bosses admit they are pushing RTO because they're so upset about wasting money on all those empty desks 7 months ago:
They can’t depreciate the assets and use them as a deduction if it doesn’t count as an office expense. That only qualifies if a threshhold minimum number of workers spend a threshhold minimum amount of time in the office.
- Comment on Crypted Hearts: Exposing the HeartCrypt Packer-as-a-Service Operation 7 months ago:
Noob question, I guess: can someone explain to me what the purpose is in having “x86 and .NET payloads” and why that might be significant?
- Comment on AT&T says criminals stole phone records of 'nearly all' customers in data breach 1 year ago:
More accurately, AT&T failed to protect the data of ‘nearly all’ of their customers. Put the blame where it belongs.