Ask HN: Jaded?
I've been working for a long time (over 20 years) in an array of industries (big four accounting, healthcare, small retail) and through consulting roles I've easily had exposure to over a hundred companies. And I'm having feelings about the industry I don't know how to address.
I recently noted this situation[0], and whilst I noted people were (rightfully) outraged, I was confused by the surprise. All I would think was "well that's every CTO ever, what's the shock here?".
I recently did a phone interview for a security role. When I mentioned to their "technical manager" that I had several CVEs I had found, he said "noone in real security cares about that" and went on to describe their penetration testing methodology, which meant basically reading out this disaster[1] word for word. My eyes glazed at that point and even after telling them I'm not interested, they've continued to pursue me. Likewise, a tech startup many of you may recognise approached me for a devops role. When I found out their production servers were whitebox desktops running Windows XP (and they strictly did not intend on changing that) I bailed.
These things are simply examples of the things I've been seeing for years, and I've gotten so jaded about how the average company carries themselves I just can't consider any role seriously any more. I find it incredibly difficult to talk to a hiring manager and not sit and scoff because I feel like I know what's coming. It's also a huge contrast to the world about online.
[0] https://www.reddit.com/r/cscareerquestions/comments/6ez8ag/accidentally_destroyed_production_database_on/
[1] https://serverfault.com/questions/293217/our-security-auditor-is-an-idiot-how-do-i-give-him-the-information-he-wants
5 comments
[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 26.5 ms ] threadOlder OLD hackers I know are super optimistic, like to make things, and are always learning.
Optimism from this point on is your challenge. I challenge you to be optimistic and do something with your experience, even if it's a hobby on the weekends and evenings.
I completely agree with your points. I run two side projects (non-monetised) which keep me very entertained. I've attended security conventions (for which I take annual leave, and receive strict instructions never to let a client know) and overall I have a very optimistic attitude to what the industry is capable of.
These things absolutely get me through the day.
"Escaping the environment" in the form of moving to another city or country is certainly an option I need to consider.