- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
Even if this is a joke, this is a great example of something that happens all the time: people avoiding responsibility by blaming some chunk of software. The electronic equivalent of “No, sir! I didn’t kill that person. The butter knife did it!”
Fake, there’s no way the sysadmin wouldn’t throw the HR rep who signed the policy under the bus (without some CYA documentation prior).
Oh, didn’t the domain
somesoftwarecorp.com
give it away?Do I really need to put
/s
on my top comment…something something poes law
The place I work at does something like this, and there was actually quite a bit of trouble when a second person with the same abbreviation joined. The responsible guy seriously suggested fireing the new guy because the policies didn’t account for duplications.
CEO gets “randomly assigned” the name of a ww2 German politician… 💀
FirstInitial LastName is common format. I knew someone named Aaron Ryan who got stuck with the email address “[email protected]”.
Just one dot dividing the name would make it a lot better
Thankfully, [email protected] and [email protected] should be delivered to the same inbox.
There is no requirement to do so, although GMail’s adoption of this non-standard seems to have popularized the practice.
Hideo Lerch
Ah yes, the famous Nazi leader Hidler.
It would be “hiler”