Στις 3/7/2013 5:44 μμ, ο/η Chris Angelico έγραψε:
On Wed, Jul 3, 2013 at 8:00 PM, ����� <ni...@superhost.gr> wrote:
���� 3/7/2013 12:45 ��, �/� Chris Angelico ������:

] You have betrayed the trust of all your customers.

Which seemed to be accepted on this list without a problem.


If my boss gave a random stranger from a mailing list the root
password to one of our servers, I would say to his face that he had
betrayed his (our) customers' trust. I would say it with strong
emphasis and a raised tone, too, and no small heat. The words you
quote above are perfectly factual and, in my opinion, business-like
language.


I just received a call form on of my customers asking me to explain your
mail and i did tell him the complete truth.

He was surprised by what i did my hopefully he will not leave from my
server.

I'd like to have been cc'd in on that conversation; if indeed you gave
him the complete truth, then there's nothing to hide, right?

any way all is well now.

Until you retract your statement that you would happily give out root
access again to some other random person across the internet, all is
NOT well.

Calling you incompetent at managing a server is like calling a doctor
incompetent for surgically removing your throat to cure a common cold.
It's too late, at that point, to undo what's happened, but if that
same doctor still says he'd do the same again to cure another cold in
another patient, I think most of us would look for another doctor.
People deciding to stay with that doctor is NOT "all is well".

ChrisA

I will *not* give away my root pass to anyone for any reason but i will open a norla user account for someone if i feel like trusting him and copy my python file to his homr dir to take alook from within.

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What is now proved was at first only imagined!
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