Reading security disclosures is a good way to rekindle humility as a developer: http://homakov.blogspot.se/2013/02/hacking-facebook-with-oauth2-and-chrome.html …
@thomasfuchs Good one. That is one of the few problems I've not had in biz, since I ship just-this-side-of-reckless early.
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@patio11 another one is always read customer’s emails twice. your brain is known to interpolate stuff wrongly especially on a quick read.Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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@patio11 more: don’t bother with configuration management (chef, etc) until you need more than one or two servers (which may be never) -
@thomasfuchs@patio11 ok, please stop these tweets, and write all these advices in a blog post that people could refer to, that's helpful! - 2 more replies
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@patio11@thomasfuchs I like that. Better than “minimum viable whatever…”Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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@patio11 one more, have a script to set up a safe testing environment where you are logged in as the customer and see the same data -
@thomasfuchs@patio11 how do you define "safe"? Off production? Read-only production? Or do you just mean secure? - 2 more replies
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@patio11 and one more: write a test every time you fix something & do CI -
@thomasfuchs@patio11 We can help with CI if you're interested. http://www.buildbettersoftware.com
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@patio11 and: always have multiple backups in multiple locations, of everything. full backups > incremental. test if backups run & work. -
@thomasfuchs@patio11 Backups: “if you have just 1, you have none.”
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