Onboarding

The Developer Onboarding Tax: Why Your First Git Commit Now Requires Four Background Checks and a Signed Waiver From the NSA

SAN FRANCISCO — Your first commit to the repo is no longer a matter of pushing code. It’s a matter of surviving the Onboarding Litany.

Yesterday, junior engineer Marcus Chen attempted to merge his feature branch into the master. His commit message read: “Fix typo in README.” Within 20 minutes, his access badge had expired, his IP address had been blacklisted, and three separate compliance teams had determined that his keyboard strokes violated California’s newly adopted “Keyboard Ergonomics and Data Privacy Ordinance.”