reminder that Twitter has never had a software development life cycle, one of the most basic industry best practices imaginable, despite it being legally required of them since 2011
relevant section from the twitter whistleblower release:
Software Development Life Cycle (SDLC): An SDLC is a uniform process to develop and test software, and a basic best practice for engineering development at commercial companies. Twitter's need to implement an SDLC was more than a best practice, it had been required since the 2011 FTC Consent Order and reported regularly to the Board of Directors.’ In or around May 2021, Mudge instructed that the Board Risk Committee receive accurate data showing that the company only had a template for the SDLC, not even a functioning process, and by Q2 2021 that template had only been rolled out for roughly 8 to 12% of projects.
I know Twitter had profits prior to Musk, probably engulfed by the debt servicing subsequently but we'll see. I've worked for/consulted at a surprising number of massive companies whose SDLC was about as well-established Twitter's template + barely any process whatsoever.
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reminder that Twitter has never had a software development life cycle, one of the most basic industry best practices imaginable, despite it being legally required of them since 2011
Wait, not even like, waterfall? What exactly do they do, then?
relevant section from the twitter whistleblower release:
Why does the government require development cycles for private companies?
it was part of a consent decree caused by Twitter's previous violations of FTC regulations, so like in lieu of prosecution they agree to certain shit
Lmao. “You violated the law. The punishment is that you have to actually do work”
looks like they also had to pay $150m but I don't know if that ended up sticking
just to follow-up, here is the actual consent decree with more background info:
https://www.ftc.gov/news-events/news/press-releases/2011/03/ftc-accepts-final-settlement-twitter-failure-safeguard-personal-information-0
and more digestible form, the DoJ's press release about it:
https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/twitter-agrees-doj-and-ftc-pay-150-million-civil-penalty-and-implement-comprehensive
recently they have an idiot making random decisions
good question
I know Twitter had profits prior to Musk, probably engulfed by the debt servicing subsequently but we'll see. I've worked for/consulted at a surprising number of massive companies whose SDLC was about as well-established Twitter's template + barely any process whatsoever.