Question

Do you think this holds true for threat modeling as well?

  • 13 February 2023
  • 5 replies
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  • Anonymous
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https://www.jwz.org/blog/2023/02/code-with-swearing-is-better-code/

Do you ever put swear words, jokes or easter eggs in your threat model comments?

 


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It might be good for Threatmodeling as well, as anything on the note of good sarcasm works well on either side. 😀

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🙌

Userlevel 6
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https://www.jwz.org/blog/2023/02/code-with-swearing-is-better-code/

Do you ever put swear words, jokes or easter eggs in your threat model comments?

 

I haven't put any swear words, jokes, or easter eggs in any ThreatModel comments, but I definitely want to put my hands on if anything is on the note of good Humour.  😅

https://www.jwz.org/blog/2023/02/code-with-swearing-is-better-code/

Do you ever put swear words, jokes or easter eggs in your threat model comments?

 

I mostly use swear words in my conversations and some time jokes are also included 😜 But I haven't put any swear words, jokes, or easter eggs in any threat model comments.

I like when documentation or code comments have jokes in them.  Helps keep you engaged when trying to read otherwise dry documentation.

I remember when I was in college, the cinema club has made a list of FAQs for troubleshooting the projectors they used to show movies. There was a problem that could occur with the audio track not being picked up correctly, and the sound ended up sounding muffled, like everything was under water.  They had a joke entry in the FAQ about what to do when the audio was like that, and the joke remedy was to tilt the projector on its side and pour out the water :)  They did include the real troubleshooting step afterwards, but it made for a good prank on new members of the club. 

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