| 6 Mar 2024 |
edef | my returns are producing a public good, but i know my utility function is insane to most people | 23:47:53 |
edef | obviously one can interpolate between the models a bit | 23:48:23 |
edef | broadly, relying on people with unusually high-altruism utility functions is why things are so tight | 23:49:37 |
@delroth:delroth.net | semi-related, checking my intuition: I think "reliance on people with high-altruism utility functions" is not a linear knob - I expect that once you start reaching a certain amount of people with lower altruism, you get the people with higher altruism to leave go do something else. WDYT? | 23:52:56 |
edef | there's definitely evaporative cooling effects of that nature | 23:53:14 |
edef | * there are definitely evaporative cooling effects of that nature | 23:53:48 |
@delroth:delroth.net | (why I think it's relevant is that if that's the case, then not relying on high-altruism people means a major shift in the current composition of the teams looking after everything) | 23:53:49 |
Wanja Hentze | In reply to @edef1c:matrix.org ie we don't pay you for the hours, you win by keeping the hours down we do that in our on-call rotation at work and it works pretty well | 23:58:35 |
Wanja Hentze | what we do give people for on-cal hours is time off, not as an incentive but just to make sure whoever is on call is relatively well rested | 23:59:18 |
Wanja Hentze | * what we do give people for on-call hours is time off, not as an incentive but just to make sure whoever is on call is relatively well rested | 23:59:26 |
@adam:robins.wtf | In reply to @delroth:delroth.net so maybe what we need is a model where we pay people for oncall response? I've known people who were on-call, but not salary. Not exactly the same as a situation like this, but there are models for paying people who get paged. Generally they get a minimum of a couple hours of the contract/pay rate for responding. | 23:59:27 |
| 7 Mar 2024 |
edef | also, to be clear: if we're not paying for hours we can plausibly pay them better continuously | 00:00:20 |
edef | overall like, people in the aggregate respond to incentives in the long run, even if they short-run do otherwise or claim otherwise | 00:00:50 |
Wanja Hentze | and people (and especially groups of people with changing membership) can respond to incentives even without anyone consciously doing so | 00:01:57 |
edef | yeah. a lot of response to incentives is by the best people leaving | 00:02:18 |
edef | the people you retain are the ones for whom the incentives work | 00:02:32 |
edef | this scene has bled people pretty hard over the ~8y i've been part of the show | 00:03:10 |
@adam:robins.wtf | I do think we should expect to pay someone for an ongoing number of hours. While it may not be necessary to care and feed a system every day, I wouldn't underestimate the potential problems or just unforeseen maintenance of a storage cluster. | 00:03:13 |
edef | part of the thing here is, you can prevent a lot of emergencies by doing consistent work to make them unlikely and handleable | 00:04:27 |
edef | spes non consilium est; hope is not a strategy | 00:04:49 |
edef | consistently building reliable systems and doing reliability work instead of responding to incidents is how we make this good | 00:05:19 |
edef | and this buys us various kinds of budget to do the improving, it compounds well | 00:05:40 |
edef | like, what i want from the incentive alignment is avoidance of "no, we won't pay you to spend time hacking on making this system more stable, but we will pay you to respond to the emergencies this creates" | 00:06:25 |
@adam:robins.wtf | makes sense to me | 00:07:20 |
Wanja Hentze | In reply to @edef1c:matrix.org part of the thing here is, you can prevent a lot of emergencies by doing consistent work to make them unlikely and handleable yes. I'm currently on-call. The last time I was paged was months ago, and it was a false positive. the time before that was years ago. | 00:07:30 |
@adam:robins.wtf | that's the dream rotation | 00:07:45 |
raitobezarius | In reply to @whentze:matrix.org yes. I'm currently on-call. The last time I was paged was months ago, and it was a false positive. the time before that was years ago. do we need to make things spicier in nixos | 00:07:51 |
raitobezarius | sorry | 00:07:53 |
edef | In reply to @whentze:matrix.org yes. I'm currently on-call. The last time I was paged was months ago, and it was a false positive. the time before that was years ago. and thus it would be a reasonable bet for me to take that you work in an environment where those incentives are well-aligned | 00:08:01 |
@adam:robins.wtf | i've definitely had on-call rotations that were much more painful than a couple times a year :) | 00:08:09 |