They suspect. I’m a teacher, and I can promise you that of the five or so students who have crazy technical issues every year, four of them are making them up. I just can’t tell you which ones (at least not with enough certainty to make an accusations).
I suspect with high confidence, though, which is worse in terms of the reputation that earns you with me than the alternative “hey I messed up, can you grant me access and extend the deadline by a week?”. Highly prefer honesty over bullshit.
That’s fair. I would also prefer they just tell the truth, but I don’t hold flimsy excuses against students (I teach adult immigrants the local language, so they’re generally pretty internally motivated and they have a lot more responsibility for their education than students in most other situations). Actively coming to me and requesting an extension would likely be a net positive, reputation-wise, tbh.
Be careful. IT with good CYA has logs. If they are really good at CYA, the logs have logs.
They might be a terrible IT, but they might be good at CYA (or friends with security, who makes good IT CYA look like chump change).
Let’s be real, IT talks, we are curious, but we don’t really care too much. Depending on who asks, yep the logs are there and it only takes a few clicks or a quick one-liner to get them, most people won’t ask for them though.
The sheer number of ‘hey, check out what so and so is up to’ that come through our chats is insane, I’ve seen so many students in schools setting up proxies or hiding games in normal looking websites… It’s honestly pretty cool the commitment some people have for not doing what they should.
Let’s be frank. The boss probably does not even know what a log is, let alone that people can pull it.
One of the more important lessons learned from a career in and around IT: no one holds a grudge like senior, non manager IT staff. And they turn up in the strangest meetings/locations. Hence the warning of “be careful”.
They know. People aren’t that dumb.
Can confirm, sometimes they are that dumb - because sometimes screwy shit actually does happen.
They suspect. I’m a teacher, and I can promise you that of the five or so students who have crazy technical issues every year, four of them are making them up. I just can’t tell you which ones (at least not with enough certainty to make an accusations).
I suspect with high confidence, though, which is worse in terms of the reputation that earns you with me than the alternative “hey I messed up, can you grant me access and extend the deadline by a week?”. Highly prefer honesty over bullshit.
That’s fair. I would also prefer they just tell the truth, but I don’t hold flimsy excuses against students (I teach adult immigrants the local language, so they’re generally pretty internally motivated and they have a lot more responsibility for their education than students in most other situations). Actively coming to me and requesting an extension would likely be a net positive, reputation-wise, tbh.
“I bet IT messed it up”
Be careful. IT with good CYA has logs. If they are really good at CYA, the logs have logs. They might be a terrible IT, but they might be good at CYA (or friends with security, who makes good IT CYA look like chump change).
The odds of your boss asking IT to pull the logs to see if you ever had access to a document is unlikely
Let’s be real, IT talks, we are curious, but we don’t really care too much. Depending on who asks, yep the logs are there and it only takes a few clicks or a quick one-liner to get them, most people won’t ask for them though.
The sheer number of ‘hey, check out what so and so is up to’ that come through our chats is insane, I’ve seen so many students in schools setting up proxies or hiding games in normal looking websites… It’s honestly pretty cool the commitment some people have for not doing what they should.
Let’s be frank. The boss probably does not even know what a log is, let alone that people can pull it.
One of the more important lessons learned from a career in and around IT: no one holds a grudge like senior, non manager IT staff. And they turn up in the strangest meetings/locations. Hence the warning of “be careful”.