9 comments

  • vrighter 5 hours ago ago

    " Just constructing what seems to be a reasonably private and robust linux computer took at least a year of full-time effort."

    How? I mean seriously, if it took one whole year to set up one linux system, then you must have close to no idea what you're doing. It takes a couple of minutes to install the OS, and another couple of hours (heck, make it days if you want to be extra thorough) to apply some hardening techniques.

    Edit: Also, you can't buy "don't write code vulnerable to SQL injection" and you can't buy "Don't ever store passwords, plaintext or encrypted or whatever. You must never know any of your users' password". This to me indicates a naive wannabe vibe-coding their way to disaster. You can't buy "privacy and security" separately from your own product. They must be part of the core business, fundamentally part of the product's design

  • codingdave an hour ago ago

    Why the false dichotomy? You can implement security and privacy without this whole "from ingredients" concept.

  • lordkrandel 12 hours ago ago

    Thank you, for telling us what we should do. People can do whatever they want, at their expense. Maybe people don't want to become rich, but have a private life no one knows about, but people they voluntarily choose. Who are you ranting to? Who is the employee, friend or boss that unnerved you?

    • amano-kenji 8 hours ago ago

      I think it's much better to become rich and then buy security and privacy than to implement them with your manual labor.

      Your time is a lot more valuable than your money if you actually spend your time correctly.

      You can be a 6 million dollar race horse if you drive it well.

      I don't think people actually want privacy and security over everything else. It's better to focus on earning a lot of money from what you really want to do and buy security and privacy.

      • l___l 7 hours ago ago

        I want privacy and security over everything else. This disproved your point.

  • moritzwarhier 2 hours ago ago

    I wanted to upvote this for the headline, because I think it's a valid point.

    I did, but then reverted to no vote when I was at "if you want to become rich". So yeah the sandwich analogy and the headline are enough to make your point?

    I read this page because I am curious, interested in IT and philosophy and want to be a tolerable software developer.

    I know HN is a startup and SV site, so there's nothing wrong with talking about business ideas or wanting to become rich.

    But if I wanted to read "get rich" slop, I'd read LinkedIn.

    Also, you could replace "security" with any specialization in this text, same for replacing IT with any other business:

    If you want to get rich with a sandwich shop, or selling any food really, it's crucial to set the right priorities. Gordon Ramsay doesn't bake his own bread! (...)

  • serf 6 hours ago ago

    >Buying things takes infinitely less time than building things from scratch.

    > financial suicide.

    man i'm sick of exaggeration.

    anyway , generally speaking I don't try to hyperoptimize for producing cash. I'm not a machine. I appreciate security more than I do squeezing the last penny out of someone. I'm frugal, and it works out okay for me because the time I dont save by not paying people is spent doing things I already enjoy.

    what's the point here? why would you bother with producing your own business instead of buying one? It takes infinite time or something -- I don't know, I didn't pay attention in econ.

    I don't know if it matters, or if you'll ever see things this way, but value isn't cash. similarly, but not exactly : cash isn't value. Some of us prefer to produce value over cash -- and that confuses the hell out of some people.

  • 7222aafdcf68cfe 10 hours ago ago

    Well you'll learn a few things in your future, that's for sure. Good luck !

    • vrighter 4 hours ago ago

      and they're gonna learn them the hard way too.