Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

posted by martyb on Wednesday October 03 2018, @12:06AM   Printer-friendly
from the auto-programmatic-asphyxiation dept.

The Coders Programming Themselves Out of a Job

In 2016, an anonymous confession appeared on Reddit: "From around six years ago up until now, I have done nothing at work." As far as office confessions go, that might seem pretty tepid. But this coder, posting as FiletOFish1066, said he worked for a well-known tech company, and he really meant nothing. He wrote that within eight months of arriving on the quality assurance job, he had fully automated his entire workload. "I am not joking. For 40 hours each week, I go to work, play League of Legends in my office, browse Reddit, and do whatever I feel like. In the past six years, I have maybe done 50 hours of real work." When his bosses realized that he'd worked less in half a decade than most Silicon Valley programmers do in a week, they fired him. The tale quickly went viral in tech corners of the web, ultimately prompting its protagonist to delete not just the post, but his entire account.

About a year later, someone calling himself or herself Etherable posted a query to Workplace on Stack Exchange, one of the web's most important forums for programmers: "Is it unethical for me to not tell my employer I've automated my job?" The conflicted coder described accepting a programming gig that had turned out to be "glorified data entry"—and, six months ago, writing scripts that put the entire job on autopilot. After that, "what used to take the last guy like a month, now takes maybe 10 minutes." The job was full-time, with benefits, and allowed Etherable to work from home. The program produced near-perfect results; for all management knew, their employee simply did flawless work.

The post proved unusually divisive, and comments flooded in. (It's now been viewed nearly half a million times.) Reactions split between those who felt Etherable was cheating, or at least deceiving, the employer, and those who thought the coder had simply found a clever way to perform the job at hand. Etherable never responded to the ensuing discussion. Perhaps spooked by the attention—media outlets around the world picked up the story—the user vanished, leaving that sole contribution to an increasingly crucial conversation about who gets to automate work, and on what terms.

Call it self-automation, or auto-automation. At a moment when the specter of mass automation haunts workers, rogue programmers demonstrate how the threat can become a godsend when taken into coders' hands, with or without their employers' knowledge. Since both FiletOFish1066 and Etherable posted anonymously and promptly disappeared, neither were able to be reached for comment. But their stories show that workplace automation can come in many forms and be led by people other than executives.

Career suicide: The most important job for programmers.


Original Submission

 
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
Display Options Threshold/Breakthrough Mark All as Read Mark All as Unread
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by bzipitidoo on Wednesday October 03 2018, @03:22AM

    by bzipitidoo (4388) on Wednesday October 03 2018, @03:22AM (#743234) Journal

    Frankly, it's not much of a job if it has only a few duties that can all be automated. I've never held back in such circumstances. Anyone who is tempted to featherbed ought to ask themselves if that's what they really want their career to have been, should they manage to make it last.

    Yes, I know, jobs don't grow on trees, and it's scary to put your sole source of income on the line. There are a hundred job related fears that the worker will have to face. Did your boss ask you to lie, and even break the law, hinting that you'll be fired if you don't "make it happen", wink, wink? Are you being pushed to put in more than 40 hours per week, for no extra pay of course? Are you being gaslighted, given bad reviews, and even asked to take a pay cut? Got coworkers trying to stab you in the back?

    You've got to secure your own personal finances so you can do the right thing. It's really sad how many people somehow just can't cut back on the consumption, just got to have that new car, that bigger house, eat out every day, and so on. Or you've got that ginormous student loan hanging over your head. If you feel you cannot afford to lose your job, you're a lot more vulnerable to unfair pressures. Makes it a lot, lot harder to stand up to the boss and say "no" to whatever idiocy or evil was just asked of you. And if you do cave in to an unreasonable demand, particularly if it involves breaking the law, you've only make things worse. They'll want you to do it again and again, and now they can blackmail you.

    Starting Score:    1  point
    Moderation   +3  
       Insightful=3, Total=3
    Extra 'Insightful' Modifier   0  
    Karma-Bonus Modifier   +1  

    Total Score:   5