> Honestly, I wouldn’t be surprised if some NPM build crashed even at Kik’s own headquarters today
Humorously, this did happen. From the medium post by kik[0]:
I found out about this problem like a lot of you, when our builds started failing because we use the extremely helpful JSCS. Through a long chain of dependencies, JSCS relied on left-pad@0.0.3, which was removed by the author yesterday. Our team was confused at the time as well.
Reading the article it seems like the Kik emails were a little poorly worded, but not extremely so.
However, Azer's response is completely over the top. Clearly he has a take no prisoners attitude and scorched earth approach to things. Given that open source is also about collaboration, this response is kinda lame.
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[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 22.9 ms ] threadHumorously, this did happen. From the medium post by kik[0]:
I found out about this problem like a lot of you, when our builds started failing because we use the extremely helpful JSCS. Through a long chain of dependencies, JSCS relied on left-pad@0.0.3, which was removed by the author yesterday. Our team was confused at the time as well.
[0]: https://medium.com/@mproberts/a-discussion-about-the-breakin...
However, Azer's response is completely over the top. Clearly he has a take no prisoners attitude and scorched earth approach to things. Given that open source is also about collaboration, this response is kinda lame.
A request, by definition requires a binary response.
A polite request, by definition, means that you can live (however badly) with either a Yay, or a nay.
Kik's attitude (whilst claiming to be polite), was that anything other than a "Yay", would be met with lawyers.
On this one, #IStandWithAzer.