- Only took 18 years since it was first reported. - In other words, a big customer finally got effected - Haven’t read into this too much, but I think the affected person that made this get attention was a solo dev that was prototyping a solution for one of his customers. - And the reason he raised a stink was because he had a huge bill, as the name he chose for his bucket was by chance the same an open source project used as a sample bucket name, so whenever someone deployed it without first customising the config, it was pinging his bucket and getting a 403. 
- Given the timing i suspect this was the article that drove the change. It was shared quite a bit over past few weeks. 
- This is why most of our thornier bugs eventually get fixed. 
 
 
- How the fuck did people tolerate this service when getting charged for fucking 403 errors? - I believe that the trick is not to show the developers the bill. - Let the developers all tell each other “it’s cheap because you don’t have to buy the servers; you only pay for what you use!” - Only managers see the real price. - I believe that the trick is not to show the developers the bill. - I haven’t had access to the AWS bill in 4 of 5 companies that I’ve worked at. Why? Fuck if I knew, but I got vague answers like security and compliance when I asked. - I wonder how many thousands could have been saved if all devs could see what they’re actually paying for but not using. - I think it’s a combination of things. My experience definitely parallels yours: when developers have access to the bill they tend to realize the cost of the services they are using. Sometimes even resulting in optimizations to those costs. - At the same time AWS can get fucked with how horrible their bills are to understand. They don’t exactly go out of their way or even slightly on a good path to deliver a clear bill. - So even if the developers have access to the bills they might just end up with an impenetrable list of bullshit from AWS 
- They will don’t care, not their money, not their job. Can’t blame them 
 
- They show us the cloud bills at my work. It’s a sobering moment when you see the monthly price tag for your team’s development work. - I’m not saying it’s not justified or that the company doesn’t make up for that cost many times over but it’s very useful to have a real world reference. 
 
- because it didn’t happen to be a problem at the time 
 
- It makes me wonder how much income this actually provided to AWS. - Probably not much, but how many people noticed a few bucks here and there on a massive bill? 
 




