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294 points NotPractical | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.001s | source
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dylan604 ◴[] No.41855041[source]
Take this as a lesson. If you've been a dev long enough, you've worked on a project knowing that how the project is being done isn't the best method with every intention of going back to make it better later, but not at the expense of getting the MVP up and running. You'll also have seen that never actually happening and all of those bad decisions from the beginning still living all the way to the bitter end.

I'm guessing not one person involved would have ever imagined their code being left on a machine just left out in the open exposed to the public completely abandoned by the company.

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flomo ◴[] No.41856088[source]
They might have had the most perfectly developed decommissioning process. And nobody is going to care when their paychecks stop showing up, and everything suddenly gets trucked-off into receivership.

Given the era and constraints, I don't see how it was irresponsible or 'sloppy' to have a local database on these things. This most likely is not on development.

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1. qwery ◴[] No.41858208[source]
I think you're right in general -- that is, regardless of the original company's practices, the entity selling off the assets should be required to do that responsibly -- but then:

> the unit I've got an image for has records going back to at least 2015.

Whether or not it's "on development" -- that's sloppy. Like how it would be a problem if your preferred grocery store kept your details on the cash register you checked out through almost ten years ago. It's a point-of-sale terminal holding on to high risk data for no reason.

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2. flomo ◴[] No.41860914[source]
I recall being surprised to see people using a Redbox in the grocery store. Like, wow, (a) this company still exists, and (b) ppl still watch DVDs. And that was years ago. I think it's not unlikely the company was already in total zombie-mode by 2015.