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[flagged] How Killers Bought Guns They Weren't Supposed to Get (wsj.com)
11 points by jhull on June 11, 2018 | hide | past | favorite | 9 comments



WSJ has a paywall, the "web" link under the title in this page does not solve that issue.

How long before we'll add an "Outline" link to use that decluttering service?


How's this related to tech?


In addition to what other commentators have said, this website is chock full of people who like to solve meaningful problems.

Gun violence in America is a meaningful problem.


...because tech isn't conceived, designed, or implemented in a vacuum, but rather as part of human society?

There's a growing sense of a disconnect between "tech" (whatever we take that to mean) and, well, just about everyone else on some of these squishy ethical / legal matters like privacy, accessibility, "fair" taxation (whatever that means), etc.

In a less hand-wavy sense, you could also see this particular story as a failure of technology to account for fallible human systems with limited resources, or for the complexity of real-world legal / political contexts. This in turn leads into discussions of the flaws with government contract procurement processes, as well as meaningful discussions of the importance of a solid UI / UX design process.

Moreover, this article itself is an excellent working example of how to diagnose, drill down into, and present user-facing problems. If more of us who write software understood our users' problems this clearly, we'd build much better software.


If you think it doesn't belong then flag it.

If you don't want to see it, hide it.

Having acted, and move on.


Missing records in a database? That's about as close as I can see a connection, but that's more of a problem with the humans operating the system than the system itself.


It is on a website? Hacker news isn't limited to technology discussions anyway. NFL, dating challenges, depression, politics, it's all here.


Usually some sort of ancillary connection to tech, startups, programming, etc. Oh well, guess HN is becoming more like /r/politics every day.


Well, the way it's kind of connected is that most people here are programmers or connected to tech.




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