Hello y’all. I’ve been trying to understand the software development industry from a societal POV but most sources I find have this liberal corporate bootlicking theme or don’t have much hard data. Search engines provide few good sources 🤔
In specific I would like to see some research in the self-assessment of bullshit job status in the industry or a similar analysis. In my anecdotal experience a gigantic portion of jobs I’ve seen provide basically no benefit to society (but pay well I guess), and I would like to check if this belief of mine holds up scientifically.
Anybody know any places to start?
Gonna look into that one too, thanks!
That sounds interesting and fits the description of bullshit jobs to a T, but I’m also very interested in a thing that I’ve been calling “bullshit job” in my head but I guess is slightly different. Basically a lot of current IT industry focuses only on reinventing and commodifying previously existing tech, and branding it as if nothing like that ever existed before. As some examples, there’s Discord basically just being a worse XMPP or VS Code which is just Atom with keyloggers. These jobs do “produce” things, but their market is mostly created artificially through sheer marketing and layman ignorance, and at the end of the day their function to society is barely extant compared to what they could have working on what already exists. On the other hand, they serve perfectly to further accumulate tech corporations’ shares of their control over the IT environment.
Like, I’m sure if somebody who works developing Discord they could believe their job is “productive” (specially if they’re too young to have used MSN), so I’m not sure if it would have the same psychological impact of actual bullshit jobs, which are much better exemplified by the people who have to redesign youtube’s front-end every 2 months or so.
But reading the sources listed here I’ll probably find better vocabulary to understand these concepts better though, so I’ll hit the books.