• Eximius@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    A genz hacker. In a world where “hacking” is writing prompts and calling IT help desks.

    • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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      8 hours ago

      Okay look, I’m old, I’m inadequate, and I’m drunk. But I’m also a millennial, and I was a flight instructor at the age of 23. I pray to whatever god actually exists instead of Jesus for the unceremonious deletion of every soul that doesn’t give young folks a chance to learn, grow and actualize themselves. Because I am so inordinately sick of being written off due to the year in which my parents fucked that I’ve got room on the docket to be pissed off when you do it to cohorts other than mine.

      It is our responsibility to teach the kids, to let them learn, to let them fuck up in order to learn some more, so that they can become the actual adults someday. And it hurts my mind, soul and dick that I’m apparently the only human on earth not excessively lead-addled to realize that. And bitch I’ve washed my hands in 100LL. It’s blue and feels cold at any temperature.

      If there’s one thing I’m going to teach you commie retards before I’m banned outright from this platform, it’s that you treat your students with at least the benefit of the doubt if you can’t manage genuine respect. Believe it or not, they’re real people living real lives that are different than your own. Things that are obvious to you aren’t to them because their lives led them to be curious about a different set of things than you did. And if you find yourself in the role of “teacher”, almost always your path led you to expertise sooner than your students. Sooner. Not Younger. I can tell you that, having served as a flight instructor at 23 mostly teaching men in their 50’s.

      You think you’re the senior in a field? You think it’s your job to reign superior over your juniors? Think again. Because it’s your job to sit in the right seat as a kid twice your age sits in the Captain’s seat and fails to use the rudder correctly, because falling off a bike is how you learn how to ride. You have to let them slam the plane into the runway, because how the hell else are they going to learn?

      Anyone with more experience expressing contempt for those with less experience for having shown up later: FUCK YOUR FUNERAL. Die unmourned.

      • dragonlobster@programming.dev
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        24 minutes ago

        it’s not the experience or knowledge part that bothers me, as you said people focused on different things and everyone starts from 0. it’s the attitude of giving up when their ai slop doesn’t work or coming up with bandaid solutions to get the task done quickly rather than trying to actually learn or see the bigger picture. it’s an era of short attention span and fast dopamine due to tech, ofc everyone is affected but gen z and a more so because their parents put ipads in their faces since 0 years old.

      • CancerMancer@sh.itjust.works
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        3 hours ago

        The amount of times boomers on worksites called me retarded for not knowing how to do something I’d never done before astounded me.

        Meanwhile these fuckers would get real butthurt and start yelling and making a fuss when they’d struggle to find a file they just saved on their PC and you do anything besides silently assist them.

        I vowed to be different, to teach my people what it means to be competent and respectful. I tell them I expect to see the same level of professionalism and respect I show them going to everyone around them. It’s working! They aren’t coming to work high or hungover, they aren’t being pieces of shit, and they’re communicating with each other instead of yelling insults at each other (well except for when its funny lol).

        This has made me unpopular with the boomer leaders but fuck em: we get shit done, we get it done right, nobody gets hurt, and everybody feels respected and doesn’t dread coming to work.

        • warbond@lemmy.world
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          43 minutes ago

          It’s a response to the tired refrain that the latest generation are stupid and lazy

    • lordziv@lemmy.nz
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      11 hours ago

      Tbf, some of the best hackers were social engineering their way into the backend just by calling up certain support numbers in the 80s

      • skozzii@lemmy.ca
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        11 hours ago

        I refuse to call social engineers hackers, conmen is more fitting.

        • Squirrelanna@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          3 hours ago

          Defcon would disagree. I’ve watched so many presenters talk about all forms of penetration testing, many of which used social engineering and lockpicking as a way to create exploitable vulnerabilities in networks. Whether or not you care to call them hackers… It doesn’t really matter, won’t stop them from hacking.

        • HieroProtagonist@lemmy.ml
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          3 hours ago

          Real hackers social-engineered their way into high security systems decades before the first blue haired femboy nerd proudly announced “Btw i am usin Arch!”

        • thallamabond@lemmy.world
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          6 hours ago

          Hacking is making something work in an unconventional or unexpected way. Social engineers hack people in that way.