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461 points thunderbong | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.521s | source
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davedx ◴[] No.42133938[source]
This seems like a glaring bug in the scripts run by that `npx` command. The author is correct, the scripts should 100%:

- Choose the lowest cost resource (it's a tutorial!)

- Cleanup resources when the `delete` subscript is run

I don't think it's fair to expect developers to do paranoid sweeps of their entire AWS account looking for rogue resources after running something like this.

If a startup had this behavior would you shrug and say "this happens, you just have to be paranoid"? Why is AWS held to a different standard by some?

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reddalo ◴[] No.42134081[source]
> do paranoid sweeps of their entire AWS account looking for rogue resources

That's the thing that annoys me the most about AWS. There's no easy way to find out all the resources I'm currently paying for (or if there's a way, I couldn't find it).

Without an easy to understand overview, it feels like I don't have full control of my own account.

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1. michaelsalim ◴[] No.42134973[source]
Every so often, I'd get a random bill from AWS totaling to a few cents. No idea where it comes from and it's not worth the non trivial effort to find out about it. Just another reason I avoid AWS unless necessary.
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2. londons_explore ◴[] No.42135128[source]
Same here. And I'm worried that one month that bill will suddenly be $20k because whatever was costing a few cents suddenly gets hit by some DDoS attack.

Or that my card will expire and AWS will send that $0.03 bill to collections and slap court fees on and send a bailiff.

Their whole setup seems intended to cause expensive mistakes.