|
|
|
|
|
by mfoy_
4018 days ago
|
|
You are wrong because this IS about how the Internet works and less about how one person/company screwed up. Apparently all it takes is one ISP misconfiguring something to break large swathes of the Internet. I believe the consensus on HN is that no one entity should have an Internet kill switch. If someone managed to disrupt mail delivery on a global scale, people would be less concerned with THAT it happened than that it COULD HAVE happened in the first place. Why would global mail delivery be so not-fault-tolerant that one mistake brought it to a grinding halt for hours? Same deal here. |
|
Thing is, everybody knows (and has always known) this can happen. Everybody also knows how to avoid it. Well-intentioned people tend to try to avoid breaking the internet.
That really doesn't make the negligence of Telecom Malaysia any more defensible.
I really don't see what's the point of defending Telecom Malaysia, a plenty of people manage to operate their equipment in a manner that doesn't break the internet.
Just because this was a mistake doesn't mean they should not be held responsible (and no, I'm not saying someone should go to prison.)