On 12/05/2017 02:59 AM, Rich Kulawiec wrote:
On Mon, Dec 04, 2017 at 07:38:18PM -0500, Eric Tykwinski wrote:
Main point I think is mailops comes with a learning curve, and it happens...
"Current Peeve: The mindset that the Internet is some sort of
school for novice sysadmins and that everyone *not* doing stupid
dangerous things should act like patient teachers with the ones
who are."
--- Bill Cole
---rsk
Indeed. What Ajit Pai missed in his deliberations for the Dec 14 FCC
vote is that the Internet as we know it was developed under the stern
eyes of the Department of Defense and the National Science Foundation.
The NSF in particular ran the 'Net like bouncers do in a strip club:
you break the rules, you go. No argument.
The original trust model for the Internet was based on this unrelenting
oversight. You didn't expect Bad Things(tm) because the consequences of
doing them was so severe: banishment and exile. Also, the technical
ability required to do Bad Things(tm) wasn't easily won. Accessing the
'Net was a PRIVILEGE, not a right. Abuse at your own peril.
Organizations had experienced sysadmins because it was imperative to the
survival of the connection to the 'Net. One gained experience by being
apprenticed to some experienced sysadmin. Today: not so much.
Indeed, I'm not aware of any certification that applies to system
administrators. Network administrators have certs that are
well-recognized and accepted. Mail admins? Server admins? The certs
that are out there border on jokes or disguised sale pitches. (Not
unlike a certain operating system and software product vendor who put
"free" copies into schools to build their marketing base.)
Ok, I'll shut up now.