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Discussion (11 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews
I know nothing about the NHS, so I have no idea if this is plausible.
Just a reminder - socialism does not necessarily imply communism, and and implementation of communism thus far has been extremely corrupt.
I lived the in the UK for a couple of years in the early 2000's, the NHS was awesome. It's now a shallow shell of its former self.
Australia where I'm from is trying to imitate the privitisation of health, but my state-local for-profit hospital just went tits up and has been acquired by the government. Partially because a baby needlessly died because profit > caring about human lives, but it wasn't accountable and used tax havens etc. etc.
Fuckin' mess.
I feel for the the UK, because at their best, they probably had the best socialised healthcare system in the world (partly because their population size afforeded them access to medical equipment that other similar countries in Scandinavia etc. can't quite afford).
The US profit motive trumps well-being and healthcare tied to your employment just screws with our heads for most reasonable people. The people that need the help the most are denied it, whilst for the rich - it's built in.
I remember when I was at GDS back in 2016 a less-central team tried to make a repo private because of an security incident they decided not to prioritise, and they were surprised to find out that forks didn’t go private as well when they did it. Luckily they changed tack after a pointed conversation.
Is he being naive here? They give explicit reasons for the change. I suspect the author is unaware of the wider picture here, he may be tech savvy but he does not know how to run a national health service and he's speaking way out of his comfort zone.
> The majority of code repos published by the NHS are not meaningfully affected by any advance in security scanning. They're mostly data sets, internal tools, guidance, research tools, front-end design and the like. There is nothing in them which could realistically lead to a security incident.
Such repositories should not be closed due to a knee jerk reaction