this post was submitted on 22 Jul 2024
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[โ€“] mriormro@lemmy.world 1 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Then you do not get licensed and cannot work on certain projects that may require a licensed or accredited team.

Licensure isn't about how good you are. It's about ensuring that you, as a professional, understand the ramifications of your contributions to the work you do and the field you are a part of and accepting the responsibility of those ramifications. Continuing education is also a huge part of it but I don't think software engineers have much issue there.

[โ€“] aidan@lemmy.world 1 points 3 months ago

Licensure isn't about how good you are. It's about ensuring that you, as a professional, understand the ramifications of your contributions to the work you do and the field you are a part of and accepting the responsibility of those ramifications.

  1. Does it have a record across industries of demonstrably doing that? I don't believe so.

  2. Is there any evidence of that actually being a problem amongst self-taught devs? (And not a problem amongst traditionally degree'd devs?)

In my experience, self-taught devs have a higher sense of responsibility when it comes to code than fresh grads or boot-camp devs. But of course once someone's been working for a bit it all evens out.