The Sunday Audit: Reclaiming the Dignity of the Personal Inspect
The radiator in Karim’s office let out a sharp, metallic hiss, a sound that usually signaled the end of his focus, but today it only anchored him deeper into the mahogany chair. It was on a Sunday. Outside, the sky was that bruised shade of purple that precedes a heavy snow, but Karim wasn’t looking at the weather.
He was looking at 44 lines of shell script. His eyes felt like they had been rubbed with fine-grit sandpaper, a physical consequence of staring at white text on a charcoal background for the better part of two hours. He wasn’t a developer by trade; he was a guy who just wanted to know what happened when he pressed “Enter.”
He had downloaded a small utility designed to manage some obscure system permissions. Most people-about 94 percent of the population, he imagined-would have just double-clicked the .exe, clicked “Yes” on the User Account Control prompt, and gone back to their coffee.
But Karim had recently developed a peculiar habit. He had decided that running something he hadn’t at least glanced at was no longer a version of himself he wanted to inhabit. It felt like eating a meal without knowing if the chef had washed their hands, or perhaps more accurately, like signing a contract where the middle
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