There's an utterly ridiculous "study" out from Stanford about "ghost engineers" which are reportedly engineers who do nothing at companies.
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@thisismissem @esk I would absolutely love to have more time to write code at work. I do so many other things though itβs hard to find projects where I can.
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Kris Mitka :java: :rust:replied to Emelia πΈπ» last edited by
@thisismissem they are overlooking the commits you talk others out of.
Something something β¦ chalk markβ¦
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Emelia πΈπ»replied to Emelia πΈπ» last edited by [email protected]
Hey, so someone wrote an article about this terrible paper too: https://yieldcode.blog/post/ghost-engineers/
And @changelog issues a retraction in their latest newsletter about the veracity of the claims:
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@thisismissem paging @jasongorman
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@jackeric @thisismissem I had a DM conversation with the lead author. Executive summary: we're all stupid for not understanding it.
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@thisismissem i totally missed this thread and the fact that changelog was covering it (incredibly disappointing, but good to see the retraction at least).
i'm totally with you on everything you said in the thread. it's just a bad excuse for justifying more surveillance.
i also had some other thoughts about "ghost engineers" here: https://front-end.social/@mayank/113567790493833082
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@jasongorman @jackeric oooh, right. Haha, nope. If you put out claims in infographics and your research actually doesn't back up those claims, you've done crappy research.
Fwiw, I filed a complaint with the Stanford Ethics committee
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@mayank not even more surveillance, but actively advocating for people to be laid off due to an utterly bullshit metric driven from an utterly flawed AI model.
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@thisismissem @jackeric A complaint about what? The study?
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@jasongorman @jackeric the study and the infographics that actually have very little basis in that study