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emodendroket 7 hours ago

I assume it's because he is seeking to pay rent, food bills, and other expenses through employment.

massysett 7 hours ago | parent | next [-]

“I assume it's because he is seeking to pay rent, food bills, and other expenses through employment.”

Fair enough, so if there were one “right” answer, that would be the one to give whether true or not.

But here there is no obvious right answer. If the employer is looking for a particular answer, the poster doesn’t know what it is. In that case, the best thing to say is simply the truth, particularly when the truth that the poster gives here is completely reasonable.

inigyou 2 hours ago | parent [-]

The best thing to say when you don't know the answer probabilistically is to give the most likely correct answer.

pipes 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

A truthful, nuanced, well reasoned answer will be well received by an employer with a culture you want to work in.

coldtea 2 hours ago | parent | next [-]

>A truthful, nuanced, well reasoned answer will be well received by an employer with a culture you want to work in.

If you're into long shot betting AND your savings aren't running out while waiting to land a new job, that might be a good strategy

TACD 2 hours ago | parent [-]

I don’t see why “truthful, nuanced, well reasoned” is the long-shot vs cagey and evasive.

coldtea 32 minutes ago | parent [-]

Obviously because the latter lands more jobs.

arcanemachiner 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> an employer with a culture you want to work in

A modern luxury, unavailable to many.

bossyTeacher 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Average ZIRP era HN advice. Not applicable anymore.

acc_297 7 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

you assume correct

furyofantares 7 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I think honesty is still probably correct - if you're struggling to figure out how to hedge.

I think you'd rather have good odds at some companies and 0% at others, rather than abysmal but non-zero odds at all companies.

And as an added bonus, you might get hired at a company where you're actually a good fit, rather than one you weasled your way into, and get to pay rent, food bills, and other expenses through employment for a long time!

simonw 7 hours ago | parent [-]

It's pretty easy as an interviewer to spot when a candidate is hedging on a question, and it's the kind of thing that might get discussed in the post-interview debrief.

"Wouldn't give a straight answer on question X" isn't an instant no-hire, but it's not a positive signal.

ipaddr 6 hours ago | parent | next [-]

This doesn't make sense in practice. He hedged so not sure need to look at other factors vs he picked a side and he selected the opposite of what we wanted no-hire or he answered what we wanted small positive signal need to look at other factors.

knollimar 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I just interviewed a guy and all three interviewers asked him functionally the same question. He hedged 3 times and we just wanted an honest answer...

onraglanroad 2 hours ago | parent [-]

The guy wanted a job, didn't know what answer you wanted for the job, and you guys were being assholes.

If you can accept that then you've learnt something.

knollimar an hour ago | parent | next [-]

It was a question of the form trying to figure out how you deal with "X", and he denied X having ever happened, despite that being a core part of his current role.

He was an internal candidate, we were interviewing him to see if we could trust him with more responsibility (more X specifically), since the new role shouldn't cover up X when it happens. The role involved doing X for himself AND for other people.

Similar to the form of "tell me about your biggest weakness" and you responding with "I have no weakness".

sebzim4500 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

On the other side of this though, the third time the guy should have realized that hedging wasn't working and committed to the truth or a lie.

yen223 an hour ago | parent | prev [-]

> you guys were being assholes

Where was this coming from?

knollimar an hour ago | parent [-]

instead of telling him out loud, "hey we see you're hedging and applying bullshit interview speak, your answer isn't sufficient", we asking in increasingly obvious but different ways.

It was an internal candidate so it would be awkward to tell him to his face he was floundering.

airstrike 7 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

ironically, I'd understand people not giving a straight answer on this particular topic

LtWorf 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

"The candidate is mature and doesn't engage in bikeshedding"

5 hours ago | parent | prev [-]
[deleted]
retired 7 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I typically seek employment for the free electricity, coffee, internet, water, microwave usage and coverage from rain. Some employers even offer showers!

The best benefit about working in a large office is that nobody checks the basement.

hypfer 7 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I mean maybe that is because I live in a still mostly not failed state (Germany), but I can't imagine that these things would be _so bad_ that living in fear of saying the wrong thing would be something worth considering.

Plus, and leaving that aside, I have my doubts that even if you did that, that that company would stay alive for very long. Reality has the habit of eventually ripping this kind of unproductively delusional people (like e.g. a boss that flips if you don't say the right word with regards to the current hype) to shreds eventually.

lukevp 7 hours ago | parent | next [-]

The US has no social safety net. Healthcare comes from your employer. Everything is centered around having a job. Opinions on AI diverge significantly and someone’s response to this question would be pivotal to me in a hiring role. The market is not great for job seekers. The hiring manager can wait for someone who aligns with their company’s perspective on this.

atomicnumber3 7 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

No, if anything, I would say a very unfortunate trait of existence right now is that reality does NOT tend to punish corporations for being completely idiotic, at least not very fast at all.

Look at musk's companies. They will basically never (on any near timescale...) produce GAAP profitability and yet their IPO is in the trillions. To the point that S&P refusing to suspend their GAAP profitability requirements means the index will basically never see this company in it (which I'm quite pleased about).

The power of already-accumulated capital is simply more powerful than things like "don't be completely pants-on-head stupid about a recent fad" "don't seig-heil in front of the world stage" "there's no point in having people come to an office just to spend all day on zoom" etc etc etc.

The market can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent, and companies can remain irrational longer than you can go without contributing to your 401k.

retired 7 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

How is Germany relevant in this?

hypfer 7 hours ago | parent [-]

Acknowledging that my perception might be skewed because there are still a ton of social safety nets in place.

The same might not be true everywhere.

thatjoeoverthr 6 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Last time I was in Germany I saw what appeared to be homeless children

ipaddr 6 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Did they look Ukrainian or Syrian? Germany let in millions of people over the last few years and never built enough housing.

yakshaving_jgt 6 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Welfare doesn't entirely eliminate homelessness.

It's… like… not that simple.

retired 7 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Last time I was in Germany I saw elderly people going through garbage bins in the park I sat at. I think you overestimate the safety net in Germany. In my European country the elderly sit at cafes drinking coffee, not going through bins.

Update:

Every street corner has a yellow garbage bin for recycling. That is where your plastic bottles go. Seems like a better system than having elderly going through bins.

Avalaxy 7 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Maybe in your country they also don't have a deposit on bottles/cans, making it pointless to go through trash cans?

retired 4 hours ago | parent [-]

Plastic bottles go in the yellow recycling bin. Deposit systems are dumb.

inigyou 2 hours ago | parent [-]

They reduce bottle litter by a lot a lot.

ezst 7 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Not OP but many people eligible for social benefits don't seek it, for all kinds of reasons (not knowing about it, pride, ideology, peer pressure, ...)

inigyou 2 hours ago | parent [-]

They make it that way on purpose, to save money.

malfist an hour ago | parent [-]

Who is "they" and what specific actions are they taking?

inigyou an hour ago | parent [-]

The government that runs the benefits programs. They make you jump through hoops to get any benefits. The first hoop is even knowing that a program exists that you qualify for.

spacechild1 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Keep in mind that not every old person who searches garbage bins is actually poor. Some of them just have dementia. I personally know such people in my home town.

hypfer 7 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

That's why I said "mostly"

reg_dunlop 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

It's possible to work for an employer, and not have to compromise your values and or professional integrity.

The attitude suggested by your response suggests you haven't lived that reality yet.

Either way, I'd rather be rejected by an employer for speaking my truth, than lie to be somewhere I'd rather not be.

pesus 6 hours ago | parent | next [-]

This a very condescending and privileged comment. The job market is much different when you're just starting out, and it's especially brutal these days for new grads.

pipes 4 hours ago | parent | next [-]

The "you don't know what it's like for me" argument swings both ways.

d_silin 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

It is not. I made that choice in the past and will do it again.

"Speak the truth, even if your voice shakes"

dspillett 5 hours ago | parent | next [-]

>* I made that choice in the past*

You were replying to “The job market is much different when you're just starting out”. The past is not now, and you are not just starting out, so your comparison of their position and yours is invalid IMO.

> and will do it again.

Good for you for sticking to your guns, I'm about to do the same with a company that has all but said “dig into AI or get left behind”¹, but those starting out as freshly minted grads likely do not have the luxuries that we might have² and the jobs market is freakishly competitive for them right now³ in a way that I don't think it ever has been before.

--------

[1] time will tell if I leave of my own volition before getting kicked!

[2] experience (both actual experience and experience “talking the talk”) to help getting the next gig, a mortgage paid off so making ends meet is easier, etc.

[3] It had been heading that way for a while, the recent explosion of GenAI+agnetics has made it worse.

knollimar 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

What if the way you use AI isn't particularly important to you? Are you willing to sacrifice employment for a principle you wouldn't draw as a line in the sand?

Sometimes it's okay to say "I don't know" and it's okay to say "I don't care" and it's okay to say "It doesn't matter much to me".

Every interview is corpospeak where you infer the intended meaning of words anyway.

plandis 5 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

You’ve actively made the choice to go hungry instead of hedging your answers during an interview?

I certainly feigned enthusiasm when I was in high school to get an after school job in order to help my family buy food.

d_silin 5 hours ago | parent [-]

Yes.

plandis 5 hours ago | parent [-]

I honestly find that quite hard to believe.

Lack of adequate calories and nutrition negatively compound. You lose the ability to focus, you increase your medical risk.

I experienced that in my childhood. It’s terrible. I did very poorly academically when I did not have access to food. It’s astonishing to me how fast my academic performance improved after consistently having access to food.

Saying you would rather put yourself at risk instead of hedge your answer on a minor interview question in order to increase your chances of getting a job offer seems like an issue with prioritization.

d_silin 5 hours ago | parent [-]

Correct. I did it anyway (and yes, it was awful).

maxbond 4 hours ago | parent [-]

That's fucked up. If those are your values, that's all well and good, but you can't expect someone else to make the same decision.

Job interviews are a performance where you demonstrate you understand what professional expectations are and can abide by them. It's not dishonesty to not respond "I drink too much" when they ask "what's your biggest weakness?" just like it's not dishonesty to respond "can't complain" when someone asks "how are you today," even if you have a lot to complain about.

Once I interviewed someone and they described their tax fraud scheme to me. We didn't go with that candidate. Not per se because they committed tax fraud; because they demonstrated terrible judgment.

d_silin 3 hours ago | parent [-]

Having any kind of integrity is expensive, financially, emotionally and sometimes physically.

Software development is not that high-stakes of a job anyway. There is always another interview. I got another one soon enough, where the employee AI policy fully aligned with mine, so telling the truth was an easy, pleasant experience.

Imagine you are a pilot or doctor. Any kind of interview reply that doesn't fully align with your values now carries a real risk for human lives.

maxbond 2 hours ago | parent [-]

What I'm telling you is that it isn't an issue of integrity, and that only makes sense from a false premise - that the strictest, most blunt response is what is truest, what is being asked for, or a reflection of your alignment with the organization's values. That's really not the case. If I asked you how you were doing would you tell me about the traumas you're currently processing? Would you feel like it was a violation of your integrity if you didn't?

If that's what your values are, okay, I'm not going to tell you how to live, but it would be premised on a misunderstanding of what "hi, how are you today?" means.

I am not worried about what my pilot said in a job interview, I'm worried about what the check pilot thinks of their performance. Worrying about what they said in a job interview is like worrying about what they scored on the SAT. Once that hurdle is cleared, it instantly becomes irrelevant, because it was never measuring what we're actually interested in. It's a filter for people who are completely unqualified, it doesn't really measure a level of performance or alignment.

d_silin 2 hours ago | parent [-]

Culture begins at the front door, corporate or personal.

I would expect absolute sincerity from pilot or a doctor during the interview, including history of mental health and professional mistakes. Authority over lives of people must come with full transparency. If you are caught lying or misrepresenting your experience and skills, not only you would lose your job, you should be blacklisted from occupation as well.

In every skill, everyone benefits from honesty, both employers and employees. But I am aware this is a minority view.

maxbond 2 hours ago | parent [-]

Again, while I respect that that is your view of sincerity, I don't agree, and I'm not talking about lying, which is obviously inappropriate. Framing is not the same as lying (though taken to an extreme it becomes a lie of omission). There's also just a misunderstanding of what is being asked by questions like "what's your biggest weakness?" Language can be ambiguous, just because a very literal and extreme interpretation of a question exists doesn't mean that is what is being asked.

I don't think we're going to bridge this gap but I also don't think that's really necessary. People have different values and it is what it is.

d_silin an hour ago | parent [-]

Fair enough. I appreciate your civility.

monkpit 5 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

You should really examine your situation and beliefs if you think this isn’t a privileged position to be in.

reg_dunlop 5 hours ago | parent | next [-]

We live in an ecosystem where we (engineers/developers) can promote ourselves and display our skills/acumen/values/professionalism/responsibility in an unequivocal way. Regardless of your experience level.

I bootstrapped myself from poverty to Staff software engineer, past the age of 45.

Is that privileged? Or sheer will and force of effort?

I am not unique. I am an example.

monkpit 5 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Privilege, yes. You had the privilege to dedicate time to learning skills required, obtaining an education, probably bias during hiring processes, etc.

Even though your position might be the result of effort on your part, you do have to acknowledge that you’re privileged to be in a position to expend that effort on what you want, instead of something else, like finding fresh water daily, or whatever. It’s not sheer will that you were born in a (even marginally) more favorable environment than others.

The term “privilege” here doesn’t just mean a trust fund nepo baby.

GlacierFox 4 hours ago | parent [-]

How far could you reduce this down? Do you only clap for malnourished Ethiopian babies that can't find waterthat grow up into full silicon Valley software engineers?

monkpit 4 hours ago | parent [-]

You can be dismissive all you want, but the point is to acknowledge you don’t understand everyone’s situation and you can’t make sweeping generalizations like “I did it and I can judge you if you _didn’t_ do it”.

d_silin 3 hours ago | parent [-]

Goes both way, yes.

History has examples of extremely underprivileged people not compromising on the values even when facing death or torture.

inigyou 2 hours ago | parent [-]

That value usually isn't not telling white lies of no importance in a job interview.

d_silin 2 hours ago | parent [-]

When does it stop, though?

A white lie during interview, a deadline you promised and knew you could not deliver? A product you ship that claims to do X, but it doesn't?

inigyou an hour ago | parent [-]

All's fair in business and war.

hvb2 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Just saying, anyone calling themselves an example is someone I'll ignore (but I'll reply to explain the rationale)

This is the mentality that says that if your company goes bust, you didn't work hard enough. Sometimes effort might be the problem..

No, not everyone can make it from nowhere to staff software engineer. That doesn't mean they're not trying hard enough.

kakacik 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

OK how about some real achievements in life, is raising kids the hard way? Career is but a small portion of QoL and overall achievements as human beings, basically all of us software devs these days live have very above-average incomes although most feel like they are deserved or even not enough. So studying from poverty to software is an achievement and big move, usually, but what specific position afterwards is not that important or impressive, its just a question of a) mental capacity, mostly genetic and b) effort put into work, while not elsewhere.

Ie I increased my salary, doing same job, all 100% perm position, roughly 30x compared to my first fulltime software dev job after university. Who cares? It doesn't mean anything, just an afterthought. I am father of 2 small kids, and trying my best to be a good father and role model, often succeeding, sometimes failing. Its by far the hardest effort of my life, it takes relentless 20-25 years and I see otherwise brilliant folks failing at this hard left and right.

Also I wish folks in IT were a bit more humble and considered other engineering careers, with +- same effort taking to get a degree, and much worse career progress/compensation/freedom to choose one's path. Arrogance is much more rare there.

hypfer 5 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Hacker news is full of people having given up, building torment nexii and coping/rationalizing _incredibly_ hard.

So while I agree that privilege is certainly a factor, so is what I've just said.

A lot of people here live very cushy lives that cushion them from very pointy thoughts and questions. As someone who too has to live in this world, I'd rather they didn't.

therealdrag0 5 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Even “unprivileged” people are moral actors that can take their high road at personal cost.

monkpit 5 hours ago | parent | next [-]

What do you think privilege is?

therealdrag0 5 hours ago | parent [-]

A vague word that can be spun to your own perspective based on a tower of other vague words and personal values.

I don’t think we’re talking about slaves are we?

bluefirebrand 5 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

When I was starting out in my career it was "take the first job offer that comes along or starve/become homeless" so no, sometimes the personal cost would be unreasonably high to expect of anyone

This effectively does mean that I was not a moral actor at the time

therealdrag0 5 hours ago | parent [-]

Naw that’s cope. You make your choices, own them.

Would you have stolen or murdered to avoid being homeless? Would that have been a morally blameless act?

inigyou 2 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Most people will steal to avoid being homeless.

GlacierFox 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Christ - that's a strawman if I ever did see one haha.

watwut 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Highly paid enginners hiding behind "I have no choice I would be hungry" are usually just lying to themselves.

And you dont even get these nearly as often from people who work in lower paid positions. Or who are actually making moral tradeoffs that affects their income.

I have seen engineers take paycut or risk it because of this or that moral conviction. Not wanting to lie to customer, refusing job for gambling company, working one day less per week so that he volunteers for biblical something.

Just telling management no or just communicating about your work with ai or lack of it are not even one of those.

tisdadd 5 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I believe that I must be truthful because of my faith, though I understand people feeling pressure otherwise. I have had to quit places that I found lying to part of the employees before.

It is very sad to me that people do feel that pressure, and how the current job market is.

On topic with the article, I would love to be able to trust AI with more, but have found that I have some useful moments with it, but more because of Internet search not being how it used to be for quality.

KittenInABox 5 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

I think it depends. The people that I know that have made significant sacrifices to live along their morals are usually people who 1) are intensely bitter when others will not sacrifice as much as them; 2) are completely understanding of people who will not sacrifice as much as them or acknowledge that they simply have less to sacrifice than others. For example someone who is willing to live the "dirtbag" lifestyle out of their car to dedicate to their outdoorsman activity who is either bitter others have the relative financial security or feel immensely grateful they have consistently good enough health that allows them to be outdoors with so little resources.

For example I think the decision to stick to certain morals is very hard if someone has a disabled dependent, are disabled themselves, or require consistent access to healthcare. There are different lines for different people of course. Our ire shouldn't go towards individuals who make these decisions but the people in power who force others to be in a position where these decisions need to be made.

d_silin 5 hours ago | parent [-]

In the end, everyone makes their own choices.

I don't want to preach martyrdom, but I am also offended by people choosing moral bankruptcy when faced with even the slightest hardships.

4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]
[deleted]
satisfice 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Maybe it’s condescending, but it’s valid. I have made sacrifices throughout my career to maintain maximum integrity, and the least I can do is be proud of it, since I don’t have riches or possessions to be proud of.

Yeah I rage quit my job 27 years ago and have been a struggling honest consultant ever since. Clients who want actual solutions to their problems come to me. Does that sound arrogant? Well I also have no savings and don’t own a house.

I don’t regret most of my choices, but I am aware that if somebody paid me enough money I would walk away from my principles. It would have to be a LOT of money.

ipaddr 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

This isn't a value item for most people. Employer doesn't want ai used great handcoding or employer wants ai used great prompt coding.

My truth is I don't care either way . I get the sense that's the same for parent poster. They just want a job and to say the right thing to get past the hiring filter. Even if I did have a truth its not something I would put above being remote, pay and how a company develops software. I'd rather not have a truth and not have a daily standup.

ninjalanternshk 5 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

It’s also possible to not really hold that strong an opinion on things. Not everything is a pitched battle where doing what your employer wants means you’ve sacrificed your integrity.

ccppurcell 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

The job market being as it is, a lot of people simply don't have that luxury.

lazide 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Cite needed - FAANG certainly leaned hard into ‘lie to survive’.

doctorpangloss 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

From far away, it's hard to tell the difference between integrity and anti sociality. Even though I believe "software engineering integrity" exists, you can see how it's hard to tell that apart from "software engineers who stir dramas or are annoying to work with."

6 hours ago | parent | prev [-]
[deleted]
tfehring 6 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

It's still just a bad answer across the board. Having opinions and being able to articulate and defend them clearly is itself an extremely important hiring signal regardless of a company's stance on generative AI. An AI-forward company will be looking for an answer like "I haven't written code manually since 2025, I use ..., I stay on top of new tools without drowning in hype by ..." If that's not your answer, you probably aren't a good fit for those companies, but companies that would be a fit will still want a similar level of decisiveness. Much better to give an honest answer that will sound good to the right people than a wishy-washy answer that will sound bad to everyone.

stevage 6 hours ago | parent [-]

Surviving in most companies requires a certain amount of wishywashiness.