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> I actively avoid watching videos I think MIGHT be interesting because the risk is too high

You can remove videos from your viewing history. I do this when I start watching something but the content turnes out to not be what I expected. It seems to prevent polluting my recommendations.


For many workplaces, it's not just that that don't pay for a service, it's that using it is against policy. If I tried to paste some code into ChatGPT, for example, our data loss prevention spyware would block it and I'd soon be having an uncomfortable conversation with our security team.

(We do have access to GitHub Copilot)


Good news then, your GitHub admins can enable Gemini for you without issue.


“Without issue” is an optimistic perspective on how this works in many organisations.


I've been using https://www.proginosko.com/leechblock/ for this.


What makes you say it's a small part of that?


Argo Rollouts is an extra orchestration layer on top of a traffic management provider. Which one are you using? If you use the ALB controller you still have to deal with pod shutdown / target deregistration timing issues.

https://argoproj.github.io/argo-rollouts/features/traffic-ma...


We’re using the alb controller to expose our kind: Rollouts. The blue green configuration has some sort of delay before cutting over which prevents any 5xx class errors due to target groups (at least for us)


For anyone needing an introduction to Hindenburg Research: https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2022/01/nathan-anderson-hind...


This would benefit from a "[2023]" appended to the title to make clear it isn't new.

Past discussion: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35273406


My reading is that the author posits there is a fixed amount of change that can be safely made in a single deployment. The solution is to make it possible to deploy more frequently. This is hard, so organizations will often instead introduce overhead that slows down changes. Engineers might be tempted to blame the overhead and try to eliminate it, but that won't be successful and may even backfire. They need to tackle the underlying issue of deployment capacity instead.


For another perspective, here is the local news story where I first heard about this- https://www.wsbtv.com/news/local/ga-mother-arrested-after-ch...


My thought as I read it was that there are always multiple sides to the story.

Can you please summarise for those of us who can't access it from outside the US?


https://archive.md/jKJjz

I'm not sure it's much of a different take. She was arrested for reckless behaviour for not reporting the son missing within 1h when she knew he ran away on his own. (Georgia has no minimum time for missing person reports, she claims she didn't know about that process)


It's a shame that so many TV shows propagated the myth that you should wait 24 hours to report a missing person. The first 24 hours are the most critical!


It was true though and was a common policy. It definitely lives in the back of my mind, but I don't think I've seen any new movie mentioning in for a really long time.


It’s a very common trope in procedural crime dramas still.


From my memory they always said 24h for adults in movies. Kids never had a time limit in csi or similar shows


I wouldn't expect people in crisis to be attentive to nuance.



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