The speculation is fascinating. For most people, their guess is a reflection of themselves. Is there a term for that? This is a gross generalization, but I've seen...
- Science people guessing solar flares
- My "right-wing friend" guessed international hackers
- I, myself, guessed it was a botched software release
- Someone in this post commented their military friend says get gasAnd yet, like everyone else, I genuinely feel that I'm probably right
BuyMyBitcoins|2 years ago
You are welcome to infer as to why I’m thinking this way!
bregma|2 years ago
gnuser|2 years ago
nonethewiser|2 years ago
spazx|2 years ago
Scoundreller|2 years ago
The Rogers outage in Canada took out the nationwide debit card payment network because that infra depended on Rogers. Credit cards still worked, but depends on your station’s access to make the transaction. And no shortage of shops running their POS “in the cloud” and needing to close if they lose internet access. I actually did have to lend cash to a colleague to buy gas to get home during that Rogers outage.
All it takes is for one pipeline valve to depend on a cellular connection for billing to get the whole line shutdown.
And ugh, we hope for a botched software upgrade too, but a corp cyberattack is so much harder to recover from so can’t be discounted from the realm of possibilities. I know that’s where my mind went with Rogers given how thorough their outage was.
Was kinda unimaginable for a total outage to happen with no org comms ready to go in the pipeline. Your plans are supposed to have those comms ready for a bad update that you’ve been planning for weeks. It’s a cyberattack where you may stay silent. But I know Rogers isn’t going to admit fault until they find someone else to blame.
charcircuit|2 years ago
mlyle|2 years ago
This is the thing with black swan events. The more pedestrian explanations are almost always true, but then there's a tiny fraction of the time where you're much, much better off having taken a bit of an alarmist view.
r721|2 years ago
>A temporary network disruption that affected AT&T customers in the U.S. Thursday was caused by a software update, the company said.
>AT&T told ABC News in a statement ABC News that the outage was not a cyberattack but caused by "the application and execution of an incorrect process used as we were expanding our network."
https://abcnews.go.com/US/att-outage-impacting-us-customers-...
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39477187
nonethewiser|2 years ago
akira2501|2 years ago
We are wired that way for a reason. Until you personally see conflicting evidence you have to make an assumption or you would spend your life paralyzed or ignorant.
Biology rewards action more than accuracy.
booleandilemma|2 years ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Availability_heuristic
ShamelessC|2 years ago
Projecting, biased.