ExpressionEngine CMS
Open, Free, Amazing

Thread

This is an archived forum and the content is probably no longer relevant, but is provided here for posterity.

The active forums are here.

Ethical Treatment of Software

April 22, 2009 10:13pm

Subscribe [1]
  • #1 / Apr 22, 2009 10:13pm

    anonymous65551

    222 posts

    SEVEN SOFTWARE COMPANIES ADDED TO “WATCH LIST”

    New York—People for the Ethical Treatment of Software (PETS) announced today that seven more software companies have been added to the group’s “watch list” of companies that regularly practice software testing.

    “There is no need for software to be mistreated in this way so that companies like these can market new products,” said Ken Granola, spokesperson for PETS. “Alternative methods of testing these products are available.”

    According to PETS, these companies force software to undergo lengthy and arduous tests, often without rest, for hours or days at a time. Employees are assigned to “break” the software by any means necessary, and inside sources report that they often joke about “torturing” the software.

    It’s no joke, said Granola. Innocent programs, from the day they are compiled, are cooped up in tiny rooms and crashed for hours on end. They spend their whole lives on dirty, ill-maintained computers, and are unceremoniously deleted when they’re not needed anymore.

    Granola said the software is kept in unsanitary conditions and is infested with bugs.

    We know alternatives to this horror exists, He said, citing industry giant Microsoft Corporation as a company that has become extremely successful without resorting to software testing.

    From Somewhere on the Internet

  • #2 / Apr 23, 2009 10:43am

    Tom Schlick

    386 posts

    Software has feelings too! You need to clean its cache out regularly and remove all of the bugs! Otherwise its software abuse!!!!

  • #3 / Apr 23, 2009 10:59am

    Dam1an

    2385 posts

    Haha, thats awesome
    And I can proudly say that the company I work at (which I won’t name and shame) has been part of the anti software testing movement since 1982 😊

  • #4 / Apr 23, 2009 11:09am

    anonymous65551

    222 posts

    I’m afraid to admit my role in software testing.  I don’t want to end up in prison. 😉

  • #5 / Apr 23, 2009 11:21am

    Dam1an

    2385 posts

    I wonder if marketing software as not having been tested (on animals) will have the same benefits as the cosmetics industry 😉

  • #6 / Apr 23, 2009 6:07pm

    TWP Marketing

    596 posts

    Does this mean that I can be indicted for waterboarding my word processor to force it to reveal my password? And what about de-fragging? I’m sure there must be a supreme court ruling against this heinous practice! If not now, there will be as soon as word gets leaked by the Users Guild.

  • #7 / Apr 23, 2009 8:53pm

    anonymous65551

    222 posts

    That raises another question as well… what about anti-virus software?  Wanton destruction of these endangered species of viruses will soon have their cause taken up as well, I’m sure.

  • #8 / Apr 24, 2009 10:13am

    Dam1an

    2385 posts

    That raises another question as well… what about anti-virus software?  Wanton destruction of these endangered species of viruses will soon have their cause taken up as well, I’m sure.

    Why stop with AV, I’m sure firewalls are discriminating against all sorts of malware, just cause they’re differant

.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)

ExpressionEngine News!

#eecms, #events, #releases