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by mjayhn
2150 days ago
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This is still hugely frustrating to the people working on it. I build high pressure distsys architecture and I've worked on some incredibly cool bleeding edge tech that nobody will ever hear about and I can't even put on my resume because of NDAs. The subject pops up on hn maybe once every 3 months and I'm just dying to talk to other people in that industry but it's just a private group so I enjoy what tidbits I can read, they're always low reply posts, and pay for white papers for most of the rest. It actually became really important to me over the last 5-10 years. I have no desire to discuss the secret sauce but I've been at companies so secretive that we couldn't even send a github issue up on our personal accounts because some context might bubble up eventually as to what we built and who we are. I am so, so much happier working on my niche at places where I can interact openly with people from other companies/projects, not in a competitive manner but as engineering peers working to improve some subsystem of our architecture. I feel like the shift is coming, especially with all of the open standards groups companies are rallying behind. I'm loving that. It's just taking its time to come east of SV. |
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The rabbit hole goes deeper. Sometimes you’re hired to recruit your friends where you’ll necessarily have to break the NDA to get them excited.
A lot of people look back on R&D work where they did not thrive and quit. I think a big part of it is not realizing what confidentiality really means. They miss out on working with their smart friends, they miss out on getting ideas from other people, they realize there are not enough people they know whom they could trust with confidential stuff. They turn out to be way too square to be doing R&D work, they're hung up on breaking the little rules so how are you going to break the big rules? They're being paid to break rules and they're just afraid to break them. Then when it just comes to doing good work, it’s so important to talk to friends and family for useful feedback especially since you almost always find out from your boss that you’re doing something wrong way too late.
This is especially acute at places like Apple that glorifies confidentiality. They’ve been more successful than ever with their more relaxed attitude towards leaks. It was totally unproductive but it was cargo-culted into places like e.g. Facebook, Snapchat and Samsung that have a hard time recruiting because nobody finds out what they’re going to be working on.