>>12978226Engineering is supposed to be a legally protected title. There are very few real engineers most are just "engineers". Companies are allowed to call individual internal positions whatever they want as long as the title is only used internally and the position is not interacting with or providing services to the general public. When the average "engineer" calls himself by that title, he is really saying "I work at X Corp in the position named Y engineer". Normies just assume that all engineers are the same not understanding that there is a big difference between practicing engineers posessing state licenses with mandatory EAC/ABET degrees (technology degrees need not apply), mandatory work experience (four to six years, up to seven for structural work), and multiple state Eng. board exams under their belt (from two up to four exams), and corporate "engineers" who at most are required by HR to have a four year technology degree as the minimum requirement to work (many have just two year degrees or no degree or unrelated degrees or certificates like IT or Business information systems).