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We need to avoid thinking of this as "rights"--the company doesn't owe you a job, much less two monitors. Is there a better term than "rights" to express this that might convey work conditions that benefit both the company and the programmer?

It is a good question, Your bold question is better than the headline.

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Your bold question is better than the headline--we

We need to avoid thinking of this as "rights"--the company doesn't owe you a job, much less two monitors. Is there a better term than "rights" to express this that might convey work conditions that benefit both the company and the programmer?

Your bold question is better than the headline.

show/hide this revision's text 1

Your bold question is better than the headline--we need to avoid thinking of this as "rights"--the company doesn't owe you a job, much less two monitors. Is there a better term than "rights" to express this that might convey work conditions that benefit both the company and the programmer?