Yoav Ravid | v1.7.0Apr 8th 2021 | (+10/-334) | ||
habryka | v1.6.0Dec 24th 2020 | Fixed typo in title | ||
abramdemski | v1.5.0Dec 23rd 2020 | (+333) | ||
Yoav Ravid | v1.4.0Dec 23rd 2020 | (+74) Added a 'Posts' section | ||
Yoav Ravid | v1.3.0Dec 23rd 2020 | |||
Yoav Ravid | v1.2.0Dec 23rd 2020 | Updated link types | ||
Yoav Ravid | v1.1.0Dec 23rd 2020 | (+479) Added a bunch of examples | ||
Yoav Ravid | v1.0.0Dec 23rd 2020 | (+272) |
Knowing and understanding possible failure modes in what you attempting to do is important in order to avoid them.Security Mindset and Ordinary Paranoia discusses the difference between finding and fixing failure modes by trying your best to imagine all the ways your system could fail ("ordinary paranoia") vs having a tight argument that your system does not fail (under a small number of assumptions which are each individually quite probable).
See also:Postmortems & Retrospectives
Other Examples:
Bias
Planning Fallacy
Status Quo Bias
Affect Heuristic
Aversion/Ugh Fields
Bucket Errors
Compartmentalization
Confirmation Bias
Fallacies
Goodhart's Law
Groupthink
Heuristics & Biases
Mind Projection Fallacy
Motivated Reasoning
Pica
Pitfalls of Rationality
Rationalization
Self-Deception
Sunk-Cost Fallacy
Paperclip Maximizer
Moral Mazes
Replication Crisis
Moloch
Tribalism
Simulacrum Levels
Information Hazards
Pascal's Mugging
Akrasia
Procrastination
Failure mode is a term for a, usually common, way things fail when attempting something. for example, confirmation bias is a common failure mode in reasoning.
Knowing and understanding possible failure modes in what you attempting to do is important in order to avoid them.
Knowing and understanding possible failure modes in what you attempting to do is important in order to avoid them.
Security Mindset and Ordinary Paranoiadiscusses the difference between finding and fixing failure modes by trying your best to imagine all the ways your system could fail ("ordinary paranoia") vs having a tight argument that your system does not fail (under a small number of assumptions which are each individually quite probable).Other Examples:
Bias
Planning Fallacy
Status Quo Bias
Affect Heuristic
Aversion/Ugh Fields
Bucket Errors
Compartmentalization
Confirmation Bias
Fallacies
Goodhart's Law
Groupthink
Heuristics & Biases
Mind Projection Fallacy
Motivated Reasoning
Pica
Pitfalls of Rationality
Rationalization
Self-Deception
Sunk-Cost Fallacy
Paperclip Maximizer
Moral Mazes
Replication Crisis
Moloch
Tribalism
Simulacrum Levels
Information Hazards
Pascal's Mugging
Akrasia
Procrastination
Nonappeals