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Listened to On-call was just the beginning—reflecting on Q1 2024 at incident.io by The Debrief by incident.io
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Q1 2024 is officially behind us. So we figured that it was a great time for a bit of reflection on the exciting start to the year. In this episode, we sit down with our founders, Stephen, Chris, and Pete, to get a bit of perspective on how the last three months played out. We chat about On-call, our AI launch, and the hundreds of other features, bug fixes, and bits of polish and delight that we've shipped over the last 12 weeks. We also chat about the state of the company as a whole, our growth, and ultimately what's on the horizon.

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Reposted Marko Karppinen (@karppinen@mastodon.online)
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There’s a combo hot take brewing in my head about the #xz and #redis debacles. It goes something like: When the shit hits the fan and part of the reason appears to be an overworked and underpaid maintainer, lots of people come out of the woodwork to demand more respect and money for them. But when a maintainer recognizes that they’re in an unsustainable situation and dares to make a proactive change, well FUCK THAT GUY. WHO THE HELL DOES HE THINK HE IS?

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Reposted Terence Eden (@Edent@mastodon.social)
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I wrote this ⬆️ a few years ago. As the fallout from the #XZ hack reverberates, expect to see people calling for a "real name" policy for contributors to critical infrastructure. But, as I explain, there are several practical problems with that. https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2021/02/whats-my-name-again/ That's before we get to the ethical and privacy issues. Oh, and making it *easier* for attackers to target named individuals.

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Reposted cathos (@cathos@merveilles.town)
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Maintenance is more important than innovation. This xz debacle is a symptom of a system that prioritizes lots of things above maintenance. Take this as a reminder to rest, to mend things & pay attention to what needs mending in yourself. Do the radical thing of working slowly and making all things more whole.

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Bookmarked Optimizing SQLite for servers
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SQLite is often misconceived as a "toy database", only good for mobile applications and embedded systems because it's default configuration is optimized for embedded use cases, so most people trying it will encounter poor performances and the dreaded SQLITE_BUSY error. But what if I told you that by tuning a

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Reposted yossarian (1.3.6.1.4.1.55738) (@yossarian@infosec.exchange)
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my only contribution to the xz discourse: absolutely none of the supply chain stuff we're currently doing, including the things i like, would have stopped this. the only things that can stop this are (1) compulsively treating all code as untrusted, and (2) way, way stronger capability checks and restrictions in running systems. (1) is economically infeasible (the world runs on free labor from OSS), and (2) has had only very limited practical success.

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Reposted Geoffrey Thomas (@geofft@mastodon.social)
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@glyph @eb@social.coop I'm frustrated that big tech's efforts to increase core library security are "your project is too popular, you must use 2FA" and "the best reverse engineers in the world will find your bugs and put you on a 90 day disclosure deadline" and not "here is $100K/year and benefits to keep doing what you're doing at your own pace."

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Reposted Glyph (@glyph@mastodon.social)
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@eb@social.coop I really hope that this causes an industry-wide reckoning with the common practice of letting your entire goddamn product rest on the shoulders of one overworked person having a slow mental health crisis without financially or operationally supporting them whatsoever. I want everyone who has an open source dependency to read this message https://www.mail-archive.com/xz-devel@tukaani.org/msg00567.html

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Reposted danielle 🏳️‍🌈 (@endocrimes@toot.cat)
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It’s not surprising that a major security vulnerability is once again caused by maintainer burnout and someone stepping in to take over. We’ve all been talking about that risk for years. Sadly it’s also unsurprising that OSS teams still are going to need to plead with management to stay funded, and paid OSS maintainers will still do unpaid overtime to work with volunteers. 🙃.

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Listened to A RedMonk Conversation: Engaging with Developers on Hacker News (With Dan Moore) | PodServe.fm
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Join RedMonk analysts James Governor and Kate Holterhoff as they chat with Dan Moore about Hacker News, the social news website for developers. This conversation digs into significant questions concerning this network that include not only what makes it unique, but also the special sauce that makes developers flock there. Moore suggests strategies for vendors hoping to successfully engage this community, and more general best practices for becoming involved. This RedMonk Conversation was originally published in video form on March 28, 2024.

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Reposted Rob Ricci :real: (@ricci@discuss.systems)
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Hey, with people in the news getting sentenced to prison, facing the possibility of prison time, etc., just a reminder: it is not desirable, nor funny, that violence in prison (including sexual violence), be a part of someone's punishment. Even people you really, really do not like who have done really super bad things. It is to the United State's shame that violence in prison is part of our carceral system, and we should not celebrate it, ever. We should seek to eliminate it.