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masklinnyesterday at 9:04 PM4 repliesview on HN

> Author must not have worked in enterprise software before.

Or with open source projects. Fucking stalebot.


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MiddleEndianyesterday at 11:52 PM

Or even non-software tickets at large corporations. I reported a water dispenser filling too slowly at my office because it took me a few tries just to fill my 1L water bottle. They said it was fixed and closed it.

It was not fixed. So I took a video of myself refilling my water bottle, attached it to the ticket, and re-opened it. They actually fixed it after that. The video was 2m12s long (and I spent god knows how long making the video file small enough to attach to the ticket lol)

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bmitcyesterday at 10:09 PM

Take a look at Anthropic's repo. They auto-close issues after just a few weeks.

I don't think I've seen an issue of theirs that wasn't auto-closed.

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IshKebabyesterday at 9:34 PM

Fuck stalebot.

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afdbcreidyesterday at 11:07 PM

As an open source maintainer, I feel that statement is really unfair. Yes, we do sometimes close bug reports without evidence they are fixed. But:

- We owe you nothing! And the fact that people still expect maintainers to work for them is really sad, IMHO.

- Unlike corporate workers, nobody is measuring our productivity therefore we have no incentive to close issues if we believe they are unfixed. That means that when we close the issue, we believe it has a high chance of being fixed, and also we weigh the cost of having many maybe-fixed open issues against maybe closing a standing issue, and (try to) choose what's best for the project.

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