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by thanatos_dem
2570 days ago
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I would prefer a generic message and a promise for follow up once all the facts are known over a rushed response that may be incorrect. I’m an engineering manager in an infrastructure team (not at all affiliated with Digital Ocean, tho full disclosure, I do have one droplet for my personal website). I know how postmortems generally work, and it’s messy enough to track down root cause even when it’s not some complex algorithm like fraud detection going off the rails. I’d rather get slow information than misinformation, but I understand the frustration in not being able to see the inner working of how an incident is being handled. |
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And I agree with your premise. However, my practice has shown that postmortems are watered-down evasive PR talk, many times.
If you look at this through the eyes of a potential startup CTO, wouldn't you be worried about the lack of transparency?
And finally, why is such an abrupt account lockdown even on the table, at all? You can't claim you are doing your best when it's very obvious that you are just leaving your customers at the mercy of very crude algorithms -- and those, let's be clear on that, could have been created without ever locking down an account without a human approval at the final step.
What I'm saying is that even at this early stage when we know almost nothing, it's evident that this CTO here is not being sincere. It seems DO just wants to maximally automate away support, to their customers' detriment.
Whatever the postmortem ends up being it still won't change the above.