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Ask HN: What is the biggest bullshit you have encountered at your workplace?

19 points by sellingwebsite 6 years ago · 20 comments · 1 min read


The title says it all

fold_left 6 years ago

A product owner that asked that the content of our poker site be impossible to copy, incase someone should try to copy it.

We explained that this wasn't a thing - even newspapers, whose product is the written word, publish each day's paper online and don't apply these measures. Reluctantly they withdrew the request but made it clear they didn't agree.

Later, that same product owner was asked to organise for content to be written for the customer help documentation. We received it in Microsoft word format and on closer inspection we could see that the content had been copied and pasted from a competitor's site.

  • cercatrova 6 years ago

    The owner brought up functionality to disable copying because they themselves were doing it and didn't want others to do the same; otherwise they would not have thought of such a detail. It only seems a bizarre request because we lack their thought processes to arrive to their conclusion that they should disable copying.

    • fold_left 6 years ago

      Would it be unreasonable to consider the owner to be a hypocrite?

      • jaredsohn 6 years ago

        Based on this, yes. They would be a hypocrite if they made a moral argument. But they made a selfish one of "I'm going to copy and nobody should be able to copy us" which is not hypocritical.

  • vanusa 6 years ago

    A product owner that asked that the content of our poker site be impossible to copy, incase someone should try to copy it.

    This isn't bullshit, so much as naivete. And it isn't even that naive, really. Most major news site (the ones that have paywalls at least) do invest a significant amount of resources in making it difficult to (wholesale) pilfer their content -- even though they know it won't be "impossible". Any more than it one could, say, design a security system for a store or a warehouse that would be "impossible" to break into.

alexfromapex 6 years ago

A new exec joined our team and threatened, in a very careful way as to not technically sound like a threat, to fire anyone that didn’t memorize the company mission statement in order to be able to publicly recite it at our team meetings. This same terrible exec fired 3 people in our department within a period of 6 months and hired two of his personal friends into management positions they were ostensibly qualified for and wanted everyone to track their tasks in Microsoft Excel documents instead of JIRA because he used it to create dashboards for himself.

vanusa 6 years ago

Off the top of my head:

* Overtly lying, in black and white, on a performance review.

* Me: "So you said [at a meeting] that you 'know that X [what another team is working on] won't scale.' Can you explain how it works and why it won't scale?" They: mutter incoherently for a half a minute, then find an excuse to bolt the scene

* Finding out later that this person was promoted to "senior" management

* Reporting that so-and-so left "for health reasons" when everyone in direct contact with the person knows it was due to a lack of trust and confidence in the very person saying that. And the non-stop bullshit that day-to-day life seems to run on in that environment, generally.

* "There's no bullshit here", said by the same person (one of the co-founders).

Really, they're all my favorites. But it's not about any particular incident. It's just the way a lot of these people are.

trumbitta2 6 years ago

A customer of one of our customers complaining to my boss, who in turn complained to me, about "our product" not working as expected.

"Our product" being a demo of a completely different product I put together over a weekend, several months before, as a demo to our customer.

They rebranded and repurposed that demo, and sold it to their customer as one of our products.

inate77 6 years ago

The Union, and there forked tongue ramblings. Normally I'm for unions, but recently we were in negotiations for about a year, and when it came down to strike authorization meetings they fed us with so much BS to get us to vote to strike in order to make our employers give us more money. Things they stated they were not going to give up, ended up being given up.

bananapear 6 years ago

Hotdesking, to provide a “variety of activity-based work settings” (i.e. a few sofas and stools in offices, mainly to make them too uncomfortable to sit in there all day) and to “facilitate diversity and inclusion goals”.

In reality it’s hard to find coworkers, people spend more time emailing instead of talking, and everyone is angry that they no longer have a personal space.

burntoutfire 6 years ago

A manager showing a mockup as a real, working system in order to lock in a multimillion contract. That's more fraud than bullshit though.

  • cercatrova 6 years ago

    This happens normally in securing such contracts. Look up the wizard of Oz method of product validation.

algaeontoast 6 years ago

Being asked why I “didn’t understand who or how” horrible design decisions were implemented in a scrapped together ruby monolith by another team. Then being reprimanded when I was honest.

AMZN PIP / workplace principles are also in their own league of Bs.

itronitron 6 years ago

A former coworker claiming to a review committee that a published paper was an outcome of their research when the publication date for that paper was before the start of the research under review.

patatino 6 years ago

Fake dummy parts in software to avoid penalty for delivering too late.

codingslave 6 years ago

VPs of a large well known company hiring contracting firms that were either owned by them or passing them money under the table

Raed667 6 years ago

A company hiring contractors without the intention of paying them.

theworld572 6 years ago

Scrum.

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