The stuff uncovered in the Twitter whistleblower report is much crazier than anything in the "Twitter files" but it's much less politically/tribally salient so it got no attention. Going to do a thread on some of the craziest things, in no particular order.
— Avid Halaby (@AvidHalaby) December 12, 2022
Twitter does not have separate development, test, staging, and production environments. At least 5,000 employees had privileged access to production systems.
https://x.com/avidhalaby/status/1602127460677844993
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https://x.com/AvidHalaby/status/1602132485743480832/photo/1
I'm not transcribing this, but god darn. Basically their systems start up by reading data from other systems, so if everything goes down, there is very literally no way to bring it back up "from nothing". That's right, if all their servers suffer a brief 1-minute power outage, the whole system is fricked basically permanently until a series of manual code changes are implemented to address it.
This thread actually seems way juicier than the "twitter files" shit, at least in terms of actual legal action. I'd bet nothing happens
but maybe someone will get slapped for fraud.
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Where's the fraud? It isn't illegal to have a backend that's held together with duct tape and shell scripts, in fact, that probably describes a majority of backends. A bit uncommon for a web property operating at Twitter's scale though.
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You're right, their shitty engineering isn't illegal at all. But lying to the government about your infrastructure and security practices is.
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nothing ever happens![:marseydepressed: :marseydepressed:](/e/marseydepressed.webp)
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