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It's not fair having someone present it in such a misleading way and act as if they're on an expert on the topic when they're not and didn't even do basic research to form an opinion. It's not legitimate criticism and misleads people not in a position to evaluate it themselves.
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They could have read through what it is and said they don't think they should switch because the project isn't mature / tested enough, or the performance compromises are too high, or some other legitimate criticism instead of misrepresenting what it is and what it does.
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It will *always* feel unfair when someone criticizes your baby, especially when they ‘just don’t get it’. But if your idea is really great, no one will ‘get it’ right away and it will take a lot of patient explaining for others to want to invest the time to really understand it
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I'm sure they would have gotten it if they actually read what was written about it but they didn't try to figure out what it was. They made convenient assumptions and jumped to conclusions to push their existing view on the direction to take. I don't really care what they choose.
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Replying to and
The part that I care about is having someone present a completely uninformed take on it as if it's an expert assessment when it isn't. They could have actually read about it but instead they skipped that and jumped right to dismissing it and making it seem completely useless.
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Replying to and
Not just commenting but laying out this bogus summary and comparison speaking as an expert on the topic, without actually looking into what it's actually about. Now everyone thinks it's awful that I called that dishonest. Pretty much exactly my issue with the security community.
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So for example, at the 2018 Linux Security Summit, someone presented a completely inaccurate account of what happened with my project and turned it into a joke. Everyone got a laugh out of the suffering that I went through. They went out of the way to refuse to talk to me before.
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Replying to and
I read Tom’s posts as an attempt to give your proposal fair consideration and weigh the pros and cons for their very particular requirements. To see this as some kind of personal persecution suggests you’re not professional enough to write Mozilla’s malloc().
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It's presented as an expert assessment. As you say yourself, it looks like it he put some thought into weighing the pros and cons, but he didn't. He barely glanced at the project and then wrote that post with a totally bogus overview / comparison. That's what I take issue with.
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Look at his follow-up post replying to me. What you claim happened clearly isn't what happened. You can certainly disagree with me considering what happened dishonest but you're just making up a completely false narrative about what happened without actually looking into it.
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