
プロ散財家 どりきん
86.6K posts

プロ散財家 どりきん
@drikin
San Francisco在住の散財家ソフトウェアエンジニアです。ポッドキャスト https://t.co/2m6L6rLYRx とYouTubeをやってます!https://t.co/BtomRHs67K


At any other company, the person who just leaked 512,000 lines of source code, internal model codenames, and an entire product roadmap is clearing their desk by lunchtime. Boris built Claude Code from a side project into $2.5B+ in annual revenue and 4% of all GitHub commits. His public response to the leak: the system failed, not the person. A manual deploy step should have been automated. One missing exclusion rule in a package config let a .map file slip into a routine npm publish. The companies that fire the engineer who made the mistake get exactly one outcome: every other engineer learns to hide their mistakes. Near-misses go unreported. The next config error gets buried instead of flagged. You trade one public incident for dozens of silent ones. Google codified this into SRE doctrine fifteen years ago. Every major outage postmortem at Google, Amazon, and Microsoft runs blameless by default because the math on incident frequency proves it works. The teams that punish errors have higher error rates. The teams that instrument errors have lower ones. Anthropic just exposed their entire product roadmap to every competitor in the space. The response from the head of the product: here's what broke in the process, here's what we're automating, here's what ships next to prevent it. That's how you keep the engineers who build billion-dollar products from leaving for the company that won't fire them over a config file.


Hello from DGX Spark








カズさんレビューも楽しみすぎます!あだちさん何やってんの!!爆








