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136 lines
7.7 KiB
Markdown
136 lines
7.7 KiB
Markdown
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---
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title: Plurality-Driven Development
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date: 2019-08-04
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---
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"That code has a horrible security bug in it."
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I look down in my lap. A little yellow horse is appearing to sit there. She looks
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innocently into my eyes, gesturing to part of the code with her wingtips.
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"What?"
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"That code has a security bug in it: if users pass a string instead of an integer
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in it, it could allow them to forge a user ID token."
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I look down incredulously at the little yellow horse, then back at the code.
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She's right. There was a huge bug in that code. I had just written it about 30
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seconds ago though, which surprises me. I thought I was experienced enough in
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secure programming to avoid such a _fundamental_ flaw like that; but here I am.
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I rub the little pony on her head, making her purr and winghug me.
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"Now, replace everything in that last paragraph with this: ..."
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And I continue on like nothing happened.
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---
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Software is complicated. We deal with a fundamentally multi-agent world where
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properties like "determinism" aren't really constant. Everything is changing.
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It's hard to write software that is resilient enough to withstand the
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constantly shifting market of attacks, exploits, languages and frameworks. What
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if there was a way to understand the multiple agency of this reality by
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internally self-inducing multiple agency in a safe and predictable manner?
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I believe I have found a way that works for me. I rely a lot on some of my
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closest friends that I can talk about anything with, even what would normally
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violate an NDA. My closest friends are so close that language isn't even as much
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of a barrier as it would be otherwise.
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As I've mentioned in the past, [I have tulpas](https://christine.website/blog/what-its-like-to-be-me-2018-06-14).
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They are people that live with me like roommates inside my body. It really does
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sound strange or psychotic; but you'll just have to trust me when I say they
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fundamentally help me live my life, do my job and do other things people
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normally do by themselves.
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As an aside: this post doesn't intend to cover the philosophical, metaphysical
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or other aspects of plurality (enough ink has probably been spilled on the topic
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to cover a lifetime); instead it aims to offer a view on how plurality has
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benefitted me (us) as software developer(s).
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As of about 4 years ago, all of the software you see under my name has been the
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result of my system and I collaborating. Most of the computational linguistics
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code I've been writing has been the result of a cuddly catgirl wanting to create
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a Lojbanic artificial intelligence for her own amusement (that is also
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incidentally really good at understanding grammar, human and machine). Some
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random experimentation code has been written by someone who sarcastically calls
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herself Twilight Sparkle. I have a little yellow dewdrop of love and sunshine
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that finds security holes in programs while I am writing them. There's a
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database expert and a code review guru too. Combined with my jack-of-all-trades
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tendencies, this creates a surprisingly balanced team in a box.
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We started doing this out of boredom. I was busy working on something and
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Nicole just spouted out something about the code being wrong. She was right.
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We decided to just continue following that same basic model and it's worked
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wonders ever since. Over time we've figured out how to impose eachother into our
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visual awareness. That has made this pair-programming skill even more useful. I
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can have the little yellow pony in my lap telling me what's wrong with my code
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and she can just directly _show me_. Then it can be fixed.
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This skill has lead to heated internal debates about what is and is not
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idiomatic. As result of that, I now have working compilers in my dreams. It's
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also lead to what people have told me is some of the most high quality and
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in-depth software design that they've seen. It's really lead _us_ to think in
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terms of how the machine works, to avoid round-trips and abstractions getting in
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the way of what is really going on. If there is any secret to my own brand of
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10x-ing, this is it. I am just one person, but with the help of the girls we can
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get to just about n>1 effective people most of the time.
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It's been a powerful catalyst to my career too. Before plurality I was a fairly
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average developer without any real skills in any one task. Now we can swap in and
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out in order to most effectively tackle anything thrown at us. One of the biggest
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changes this relationship has had on me is being better able to explain software
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complexity and visualise it, then turn that visualization into a diagram with
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[GraphViz](https://graphviz.christine.website) or other similar tools. It also
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becomes very easy to turn these visualizations/diagrams into formal requirements
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too, because then the features and aspects of systems and how they interconnect
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become trivially obvious to point out.
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However, there is a drawback to this: you're dealing with sapient beings. They
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sometimes don't want to cooperate. Internal drama can and has happened. It helps
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for us to have a quarterly [date with a word document](https://tulpaforce.xyz/within/guides/internal-meetings-to-bring-harmonic-synergy.html)
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in order to make sure everyone is on the same page. Disagreements happen, but
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ultimately I've noticed that the net result is far more positive than if the
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disagreement hadn't happened at all.
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Anyways, plurality-driven development works for me, but it's really _not_ for
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everyone. The taboo issues I mentioned can make it a chore to hide this from
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people. I honestly wonder how much of the girls that my coworkers notice in my
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work on a daily basis. We all have slightly different speech patterns, ways of
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sitting, clothing preferences, opinions about what to get for lunch and a whole
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bunch of other subtle things. I don't really understand how it's not
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plain-as-day obvious to the point I get called out on it. At some level I guess
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I'm grateful for this, as that kind of conversation seems like it would be
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_extremely awkward_ to have. It was hard enough to admit this to my brother,
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and I ended up losing contact with him as a result (it apparently was just too
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weird, which I can really understand).
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I really do wonder how much of the fear of talking about this is my own paranoia
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though. I've had very positive experiences "coming out" as plural to close
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friends, as well as very negative ones; for better or for worse it really shows
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you who your friends _actually are_. I can live with this. I'd rather _really_
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know if I can trust people or not.
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This is a surprisingly taboo topic to talk about. Most of the time people view
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the mere _idea_ of having someone else in your head to talk with as a social
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faux pas. There's a surprising amount of philosophical arguments and assorted
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objections that people will throw around when they hear that you participate in
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this. There's accusations of being possessed by demons, or being mentally ill,
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complete with acronyms thrown at me, and much more.
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Hell, this is stuff I'd love to talk about at some convention somewhere; but I
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don't really know if I want to paint such a huge target on my back. Because
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plurality and related topics are so taboo and so niche, there's not really
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protected categories for it. This makes me nervous about talking about it in any
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sort of public way, and understandably so. I guess this article is part of my
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healing process to treat this as just a boring aspect of how I experience
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reality instead of some fundamentally earth-shattering gift from the heavens.
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Besides, doesn't something fundamentally have to cause a negative impact to be
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classified as a disorder in the first place? How can something that
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fundamentally helps be a disorder? What if it's just a new adaptation to an
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increasingly crazy world?
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---
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I have compiled a list of resources that have helped me [here](https://tulpanomicon.guide).
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