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by mmcallister
1509 days ago
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This has never, not once crossed my mind. I've worked at two FAANG companies and I'm fairly certain that at least at Google they'd be able to tell you've exfiltrated some code, and even if they couldn't it's morally questionable to be doing that in the first place. High risk, very low reward |
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Yes, it's probably illegal and ethically questionable.
I don't show or sell the codebase to anyone else. It's more for me to refer to when I encounter a similar problem that I recognize I already tackled years ago. I'm not going to copy verbatim, but if it can save me time to refer to a working implementation of a solution I need to repeat, I'm going to do it.
And this happens pretty rarely, but I'm competing in this job market with people who are doing the same, or, if they're not, probably have much better memories than myself. If I can keep up with competition by referencing things, it improves my own ability to do the work I do.
I'm in my late 30s btw, so already at the point in my life where I need to do whatever I can to keep a competitive edge against 20-somethings in the industry... I'm very concerned about my memory continuing to get worse and the implications it may have on my employability, despite not having much money saved up.
If we're ever in some weird sci-fi future where people who leave jobs have their memories erased, I'll gladly delete my copies of code I wrote. That way, at least my age will only work against me in the context of my current job.
Until then, I don't see why someone with perfect recall should be able to refer to things they worked on in the past, and I shouldn't.