I read it as a comparison of the attitude of helplessness around it, not the acts themselves. So it was a bit meta, but unremarkably inoffensive.
mikepurvis 4 hours ago|||
I don't think it's comparing them directly or arguing for equivalent seriousness. It is identifying a similarity of mindset where those who have their hands on the levers of power that could materially improve the situation act like there's nothing they can do.
mrandish 4 hours ago|||
But it's not comparing to school shootings, it's satirizing supposedly responsible parties who continue to deny responsibility despite repeated catastrophic failures which are their responsibility.
p-e-w 4 hours ago||
You’re right. Major supply chain attacks affect far more people than school shootings do, and can potentially cost more lives through downstream effects.
It’s 2026. Software is critical infrastructure for global civilization now. Lives and livelihoods depend on it working reliably. The “it’s just bits on a computer” quip has been outdated for 20 years now.
numbsafari 3 hours ago||
[flagged]
yegle 3 hours ago|
Vendorizing using git submodule should be a robust mitigation for this problem.
raggi 3 hours ago||
subtree is better for this case, you want to encourage actual reading before running. reading won't catch everything but it catches a lot, and the burden isn't as high as people always complain about before they try it.
saghm 2 hours ago||
This feels like the modern analog of the king, the mice, and the cheese. What cats do I need to bring in to eat my git submodules?