That's a mistake I've made before, except we did have nightly backups.
I was not the one who set up the backups, nor did I perform the restore. I just told my senior I made a big mistake, and he said thanks for saying so right away and we're going to handle it. Our client company told their people to take the rest of the day off. It must have been costly. I learned a lesson, but I also internalized some guilt about it.
Reflecting on this, I was in an environment where it was the norm to edit production live, imagining we could be careful enough. I'm suggesting that the error the author publicly took the fall for was not all their fault. Everyone up the chain was responsible for creating that risky situation. How could they not have backups?
I was not the one who set up the backups, nor did I perform the restore. I just told my senior I made a big mistake, and he said thanks for saying so right away and we're going to handle it. Our client company told their people to take the rest of the day off. It must have been costly. I learned a lesson, but I also internalized some guilt about it.
Reflecting on this, I was in an environment where it was the norm to edit production live, imagining we could be careful enough. I'm suggesting that the error the author publicly took the fall for was not all their fault. Everyone up the chain was responsible for creating that risky situation. How could they not have backups?