Comment by defrost

6 hours ago

It's neither funny nor true.

eg: Tesla Doors: 15 People Have Died in Crashes Where it Wouldn't Open (18 hours ago https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46365597)

and a host of similar stories about worker / third party accidents and fatalities related to tech.

Funny here is not used in the humerous sense, but rather the other two definitions given in any good dictionary as "used to emphasize that something is serious or should be taken seriously." and "difficult to explain or understand; strange or odd." or even the given example of the last quote as "unusual, especially in such a way as to arouse suspicion."

Replace 'funny' with 'weird' (in a slightly sarcastic tone for sure) and the comment makes sense whilst being less offensive to the reader and not diminishing someones death.

When it's the CEO or if it's about silicon valley companies. I don't remember ever reading on HN about accidents in the shoe factory or in the construction site.

  • > I don't remember ever reading on HN about accidents in the shoe factory or in the construction site.

    There are very few HN stories about shoe factories or construction sites full stop.

    That's a whole other issue.

    The hook for this story is Occ Health and Safety, many people have an interest in safety and the fact that a CEO died hasn't stirred interest out of pity or sympathy for a CEO, it's schadenfreude that lax safety standards caught someone that could have improved those standards.

  • The same reason starving children in Sudan rarely make the news: It's "business as usual".

    Systemic issues make poor clickbait.