I was responding to what above above said, in the context of an interviewee:
> and would often ask the interviewers what was the most interesting project they've worked on
Above asking, and initiating the conversation, is clearly unprovoked.
A interviewer asking them isn't the same as them asking an interviewer, where their answer potentially means you don't get hired. The interviewer is forcing an answer about their free time. It's "provoked".
No, you're responding to what I said. There are multiple people calling you out here: please try to keep the usernames straight when responding.
The point of an interview is to ask questions, and particularly in the more freewheeling environment of a startup, "what sort of stuff do you like working on?" is very much relevant to whether they'd be a fit. Sergey Brin would famously ask early applicants to Google "Teach me something that I don't know already, about any topic." YCombinator's application form, for a long time, had the question "Tell us about a time you successfully hacked some (non-computer) system to your advantage", and the answers were explicitly supposed to be naughty if not illegal.
Not everybody works for a big company with a big HR department. The tech industry is a broad place.
Author was irrelevant in my reply. I was responding to the context. And come on now, consensus doesn't define correctness.
"Teach me something that I don't know already, about any topic."
"Tell us about a time you successfully hacked some (non-computer) system to your advantage"
This should not surprise you, but those are perfectly fine. These are very similar to the examples given to us for the appropriate/professional way to ask.
That's a good recommendation for the original commenter, on how to reword their question. They're not direct probes into personal time. I should have included something like that in my original reply.
> and would often ask the interviewers what was the most interesting project they've worked on
Above asking, and initiating the conversation, is clearly unprovoked.
A interviewer asking them isn't the same as them asking an interviewer, where their answer potentially means you don't get hired. The interviewer is forcing an answer about their free time. It's "provoked".
edit: "you" to "above".