• HeyListenWatchOut@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    You frame the issue incorrectly.

    You see - it’s not some poor IT guy fucking things up (I mean ultimately the IT guy is the one who probably pressed the button, but no IT department acts independently from the system it exists within).

    It’s AT&T not having the adequate amount of funding set aside to cover for redundancies + probably adequate staffing.

    See… AT&T wants to make the biggest fucking profit margin possible… everything else be damned.

    Say what you will about the ineptitude of government, but given funding, the government doesn’t have an incentive to make things shittier specifically just to get some sort of larger profit margin.

    Yeah the DMV sucks, but Medicare works well… mostly because Republicans slice and diced budgets as much as they can get away with everywhere they can… and it’s much harder for them to sneak cuts to Medicare - which would clearly and directly affect senior citizens, who would then be less likely to vote for Republicans again no matter what culture war bullshit they spew from the billionaire owned cable TV they stay glued to.

    • Dark Arc@social.packetloss.gg
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      10 months ago

      They framed it incorrectly but they’re still right, mistakes happen, and no matter what you plan for really bad things can happen.

      This wasn’t a catastrophe it was some downtown (and it wasn’t even all their customers in all their service areas – my uncle had this problem his wife did not, they’re both on AT&T in literally the same house). It’s happened with Google, it’s happened with Amazon AWS, it’s happened with various other major players. Nobody and no department is immune to them, making AT&T a nationalized company is very unlikely to have helped here.

      In fact, because we’re so bad at raising taxes to fund our federal agencies and things … it might actually be worse in terms of reliability.