A case study in why credentials are revoked before firings.

  • buddascrayon@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    Knowledgeable and smart are not the same thing. These two are very knowledgeable about the systems they worked on and database manipulation, believe it or not these are not hard skills to learn. But they were incredibly dumb regardless given every single action they took at every point in their lives.

    • dustyData@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      Fun fact. In psychology assessment this are being called hard skills: very technical abilities for doing specialized tasks; and soft skills: social and emotional abilities to navigate social contexts, manage conflict and self regulate emotions.

      Hard skills are easier to teach, while soft skills are very hard.

      • MagicShel@lemmy.zip
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        2 hours ago

        There are certain positions I would probably be very good at from a technical perspective that I avoid because I know my myself. I could never work for the CIA or FBI for example. I don’t want to know their secrets because they could have me weigh a duty to execute my job and protect my family against my duty to humanity. I don’t know which principle I would betray, if grappling with it didn’t kill me first. Some might think that’s an easy choice but the personal cost is extreme — look at Snowden.

        No, keep me far away from that shit. Let me grapple with intellectual problems all day long, but moral quandaries paralyze me.