Short disclosure, I work as a Software Developer in the US, and often have to keep my negative opinions about the tech industry to myself. I often post podcasts and articles critical of the tech industry here in order to vent and, in a way, commiserate over the current state of tech and its negative effects on our environment and the Global/American sociopolitical landscape.

I’m generally reluctant to express these opinions IRL as I’m afraid of burning certain bridges in the tech industry that could one day lead to further employment opportunities. I also don’t want to get into these kinds of discussions except with my closest friends and family, as I could foresee them getting quite heated and lengthy with certain people in my social circles.

Some of these negative opinions include:

  • I think that the industries based around cryptocurrencies and other blockchain technologies have always been, and have repeatedly proven themselves to be, nothing more or less than scams run and perpetuated by scam artists.
  • I think that the AI industry is particularly harmful to writers, journalists, actors, artists, and others. This is not because AI produces better pieces of work, but rather due to misanthropic viewpoints of particularly toxic and powerful individuals at the top of the tech industry hierarchy pushing AI as the next big thing due to their general misunderstanding or outright dislike of the general public.
  • I think that capitalism will ultimately doom the tech industry as it reinforces poor system design that deemphasizes maintenance and maintainability in preference of a move fast and break things mentality that still pervades many parts of tech.
  • I think we’ve squeezed as much capital out of advertising as is possible without completely alienating the modern user, and we risk creating strong anti tech sentiments among the general population if we don’t figure out a less intrusive way of monetizing software.

You can agree or disagree with me, but in this thread I’d prefer not to get into arguments over the particular details of why any one of our opinions are wrong or right. Rather, I’d hope you could list what opinions on the tech industry you hold that you feel comfortable expressing here, but are, for whatever reason, reluctant to express in public or at work. I’d also welcome an elaboration of said reason, should you feel comfortable to give it.

I doubt we can completely avoid disagreements, but I’ll humbly ask that we all attempt to keep this as civil as possible. Thanks in advance for all thoughtful responses.

    • interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml
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      16 days ago

      This is more than self interest, self respecting tech workers would have refused to create our current panopticon-skinnerbox if they weren’t at the mercy of the tech lords. Seniority based hiring and firing, that has to be demand number one, number 2 is layoff recall lists 5 years long.

  • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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    17 days ago

    No class consciousness. Too many tech workers think they’re rugged individuals that can negotiate their own contracts into wealth.

    Working for free on nights and weekends to “hit that deadline” is not good. You’re just making the owners rich, and devaluing labor. Even if you own a lot of equity, it’s not as much as the owners.

    And then there’s bullshit like return to office mandates and people are like “oh no none of us want to do this but there’s no organized mechanism to resist”

  • JakenVeina@lemm.ee
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    18 days ago

    A very large portion (maybe not quite a majority) of software developers are not very good at their jobs. Just good enough to get by.

    And that is entirely okay! Applies to most jobs, honestly. But there is really NO appropriate way to express that to a coworker.

    I’ve seen way too much “just keep trying random things without really knowing what you’re doing, and hope you eventually stumble into something that works” attitude from coworkers.

  • Reygle@lemmy.world
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    16 days ago

    It’s all trash. Everything normal people use on a daily basis is pure dumpster fire level garbage with massive, HEINOUS, unforgivable amounts of tracking built in.

    They know all of this. They just don’t care.

  • graycube@lemmy.world
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    18 days ago

    Most of the high visibility “tech bros” aren’t technical. They are finance bros who invest in tech.

  • blackstrat@lemmy.fwgx.uk
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    16 days ago

    For many real world, day to day tasks, computers and the software that ran on them were faster and easier to use 20 years ago.

    • Cratermaker@discuss.tchncs.de
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      16 days ago

      I was using my school’s website the other day and had a similar thought. I remember waiting a similar amount of time for many pages to load back in the dialup days. Why is it so slow to load a page that just shows some text and buttons??

  • witx@lemmy.sdf.org
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    17 days ago
    • IT reconversions are bullshit and dangerous to the industry. Everyone and their grandma are becoming “programmers”. We’re in the “fuck around” phase, the “find out” will be explosive. Companies are inundating themselves with these “reconverted” juniors and doing soft-layoffs to seniors…

    • crypto, Blockchain and AI are just bs to make a quick buck out of investors. They are truly disastrous to the environment

    • If you use chatgpt et al. I’ll look down on you from a technical competence level

    • marketing and middle management are mostly useless. A good, and small, sales+marketing team is very effective but the moment they start growing they start to degenerate pretty fast into BS world and imposing company culture

    • needanke@feddit.org
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      17 days ago
      • If you use chatgpt et al. I’ll look down on you from a technical competence level

      Eh, I have to say I find it quite usefull sometimes for brainstorming solutions. It is esentially a rubber duck that answers and sometimes gives good ideas.

      Of course the answers are often bullshit, but they can sometimes point you in the right direction/to the right words to google.

      (All of this ignoring the enviromental problems ofc.)

  • Übercomplicated@lemmy.ml
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    17 days ago

    The Microsh*t Office Suit is atrocious — both from a Software Dev and ordinary user perspective. Literally any alternative is better, Libre Office, Google Office, etc.

    Word is bloated, slow, impractical, bad for collaboration, and politically dubious. Teams is buggy, impractical, also politically dubious, and lacks many basic features. At this point, I literally despise Microsoft. Also Windows really seems to be unusable, from the enlightened perspective of a Mac or Linux user (in my case the latter).

    SystemD is bloated and stopping Linux from getting faster.

    Most mainstream programming languages suck, Rust being the exception.

    Alright, I’m done ;)

    Edit: any website that breaks because of uBlock Origin medium mode is poorly made and not trustworthy. /endrant

        • pineapple@lemmy.ml
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          14 days ago

          I am a python beginner it would probably be a good idea to get better at python before moving onto something like rust. And if rust is so good is there any reason to learn any other low level language like c or c++ unless you are working on a current project that already uses c or c++?

          • Opsec_Organizing [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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            12 days ago

            I have only leaned a bit of the Cs, but others have written that learning Rust first is a great way to learn the concepts and best practices of those languages.

            A lot of the difficult concepts (pointers, ownership, multi thread concurrency) are shared between all three.