Hi all! One of the authors of the original piece here. Thanks for all your comments – we picked up a lot of cool ideas for future analyses. Just to address four common objections:
- We agree it's unclear whether this was one person, or several ones. But even if it was a team, the timezone idea would still tell us where the team is located (the timings seem too much like regular office hours for a globally distributed team).
- It's also absolutely possible that commit times were changed, or commits were made/uploaded using timed scripts. Still seems like it would be hard in practice to use this to cover up a massive difference in timezone, though, because it would require adding a massive latency -- and xz wasn't developed in a vacuum, but in reaction to other online events like the filing of issues or mailing list posts.
- yes, we did get the two examples mixed up (the two times we say are 10-ish hours apart are actually only minutes apart, and the times we say are minutes apart, are 10-ish hours apart). Update is on the way.
- and finally, yes, UTC+2/3 goes beyond just Eastern Europe and includes part of the Middle East. We also clarified this in an update to the article.
- We agree it's unclear whether this was one person, or several ones. But even if it was a team, the timezone idea would still tell us where the team is located (the timings seem too much like regular office hours for a globally distributed team).
- It's also absolutely possible that commit times were changed, or commits were made/uploaded using timed scripts. Still seems like it would be hard in practice to use this to cover up a massive difference in timezone, though, because it would require adding a massive latency -- and xz wasn't developed in a vacuum, but in reaction to other online events like the filing of issues or mailing list posts.
- yes, we did get the two examples mixed up (the two times we say are 10-ish hours apart are actually only minutes apart, and the times we say are minutes apart, are 10-ish hours apart). Update is on the way.
- and finally, yes, UTC+2/3 goes beyond just Eastern Europe and includes part of the Middle East. We also clarified this in an update to the article.