On one hand, I see what you're saying here. I would far rather live in a world where hiring and firing decisions came from quality of code produced, and quality of interactions with colleagues, than just about any other metric.
On the other hand, the tech community has already legitimized social shaming as a method for getting people out of jobs cf. Brendan Eich, and if this is what we're using
to make these sorts of decisions, then I can totally get behind the idea of working at the NSA equating to something shameful.
But what's shameful next month?
So. Like most nerds, all I'd really like to see is some consistency.
> the tech community has already legitimized social shaming as a method for getting people out of jobs cf. Brendan Eich
We shouldn't treat dumb shit like that as any kind of binding precedent. Just because the "tech community" has gone on silly witch hunts before doesn't justify any and all future witch hunts.
On the other hand, the tech community has already legitimized social shaming as a method for getting people out of jobs cf. Brendan Eich, and if this is what we're using to make these sorts of decisions, then I can totally get behind the idea of working at the NSA equating to something shameful.
But what's shameful next month?
So. Like most nerds, all I'd really like to see is some consistency.