this post was submitted on 19 Apr 2024
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[โ€“] dual_sport_dork@lemmy.world 11 points 7 months ago (1 children)

I think the point the parent poster was making is that the system shouldn't be designed that way in the first place. And when the vendor fucks it up due to releasing the product in a half-baked state, the hammer needs to be brought down on them in such a way that it will functionally discourage them from doing it again.

If the electronics providing functionality in your vehicle are so complex that the excuse is being made potentially adverse interactions between its various components from various OEM's can't be tested and accounted for, what has actually happened is that designed your product wrong. Throw it away, start over, and do it right next time.

[โ€“] NaibofTabr@infosec.pub -1 points 7 months ago

the system shouldn't be designed that way in the first place

Designed what way? Having parts from several manufacturers? Everything is designed that way. No manufacturer is an island, and having every manufacturer reinvent their own wheels is a terrible idea.

Tesla isn't going to write their own firmware for every component that they buy from another company and no one sane would expect them to.

when the vendor fucks it up due to releasing the product in a half-baked state

There are so many assumptions about what's going on in this statement that it's hard to even begin addressing them. It is not possible to test any device that will be used in the real world in every possible set of circumstances that it might encounter. This doesn't mean it's "half-baked", and it's not an "excuse", it's just the nature of reality. Best you can do is test the most common circumstances.