Non-IT News Thread
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@momurda said in Non-IT News Thread:
@DustinB3403 Shareholders are owners of the company. By investing they are agreeing with decisions of the board. Why shouldnt individual retail investors feel the pain of this fine? They agreed to the bad activity by investing.
And if they are NOT fined, what is the purpose of the fine? The only people that can be fined are the owners. Everyone else works for them and is not the party at fault.
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@scottalanmiller Well, they might not agree, but they are wrong according to EU antitrust regulators.
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@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
@momurda said in Non-IT News Thread:
@DustinB3403 Shareholders are owners of the company. By investing they are agreeing with decisions of the board. Why shouldnt individual retail investors feel the pain of this fine? They agreed to the bad activity by investing.
And if they are NOT fined, what is the purpose of the fine? The only people that can be fined are the owners. Everyone else works for them and is not the party at fault.
Corporations are PEOPLE! Individual PEOPLE!
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@DustinB3403 said in Non-IT News Thread:
@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
@momurda said in Non-IT News Thread:
@DustinB3403 Shareholders are owners of the company. By investing they are agreeing with decisions of the board. Why shouldnt individual retail investors feel the pain of this fine? They agreed to the bad activity by investing.
And if they are NOT fined, what is the purpose of the fine? The only people that can be fined are the owners. Everyone else works for them and is not the party at fault.
Corporations are PEOPLE! Individual PEOPLE!
And the humans who work for corporations are the employee of a individual Corporate person!
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My point is a fine is all you can legally do, short of forcing the business out of the country.
The business pays the fine, or has worse fines and punishments due.
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@momurda said in Non-IT News Thread:
@DustinB3403 As Scott said it is only their profit being fined. I ask again why it shouldnt be all or a significant part of it? Neither of you has answered that.
I did. Because that's capricious and makes no sense. Punishment must correlate with the law, not be based on the size of the company. What if an employee at Google stole a candy bar, is that the same punishment as this? If not, why would a number like 90% be presented? It's not sensible. It would be punishing because they can be punished, not based on what they did.
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@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
@momurda said in Non-IT News Thread:
@DustinB3403 As Scott said it is only their profit being fined. I ask again why it shouldnt be all or a significant part of it? Neither of you has answered that.
I did. Because that's capricious and makes no sense. Punishment must correlate with the law, not be based on the size of the company. What if an employee at Google stole a candy bar, is that the same punishment as this? If not, why would a number like 90% be presented? It's not sensible. It would be punishing because they can be punished, not based on what they did.
The only way getting fined 90% or 100% of their profits would make any sense at all was if what they did was the sole source of their profits.
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@DustinB3403 said in Non-IT News Thread:
@momurda said in Non-IT News Thread:
@DustinB3403 You are missing what i am saying. By default when you invest in a company you are agreeing with their management. If you didnt, you can choose to invest in a different company.
But management changes, decisions change as business goes on. Just because you agreed at one time, doesn't mean you know all of the inter workings of the business.
But it is YOUR responsibility as an owner to do so and you have legal recourse for this. The investors are the ones that profit from it, and take risks for that profit. Period. It is fully voluntary. You choose this risk when you invest. There is no other responsible party.
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@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
@DustinB3403 said in Non-IT News Thread:
@momurda said in Non-IT News Thread:
@DustinB3403 You are missing what i am saying. By default when you invest in a company you are agreeing with their management. If you didnt, you can choose to invest in a different company.
But management changes, decisions change as business goes on. Just because you agreed at one time, doesn't mean you know all of the inter workings of the business.
But it is YOUR responsibility as an owner to do so and you have legal recourse for this. The investors are the ones that profit from it, and take risks for that profit. Period. It is fully voluntary. You choose this risk when you invest. There is no other responsible party.
I agree, which is why I keep repeating that fines are normal and to be expected.
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@momurda said in Non-IT News Thread:
@DustinB3403 No becasue lying isnt illegal. If i did something whose punishment deserved a fine, then yes i should be fined. I have been fined 90% of my profits before(posession).
But your fined was based on what you did, right? They didn't ignore what you did, then look at your profits and say "doesn't matter what he did, let's just take all that we can?"
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@DustinB3403 said in Non-IT News Thread:
@momurda said in Non-IT News Thread:
@DustinB3403 No becasue lying isnt illegal. If i did something whose punishment deserved a fine, then yes i should be fined. I have been fined 90% of my profits before(posession).
Sure it is, it's illegal to lie on a contractual obligation. It's illegal to lie in court.
And technically, the claim is that Google lied about the best things to buy. So lying is, pretty much, what the fine is for.
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@momurda said in Non-IT News Thread:
@DustinB3403 Thats why you sell your shares when management changes their behavior to something you dont like. Have you ever invested money before? Do you keep a position forever?
Right, ownership changes way faster than management does.
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@DustinB3403 said in Non-IT News Thread:
@momurda said in Non-IT News Thread:
@DustinB3403 Thats why you sell your shares when management changes their behavior to something you dont like. Have you ever invested money before? Do you keep a position forever?
Or a different investment strategy is to hold on to your shares, threw thick and thin of the company.
Sure, but that is 100% a choice and if you do that, you absolutely need to be the one help accountable for being the long term owner responsible for what happened.
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@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
@DustinB3403 said in Non-IT News Thread:
@momurda said in Non-IT News Thread:
@DustinB3403 Thats why you sell your shares when management changes their behavior to something you dont like. Have you ever invested money before? Do you keep a position forever?
Or a different investment strategy is to hold on to your shares, threw thick and thin of the company.
Sure, but that is 100% a choice and if you do that, you absolutely need to be the one help accountable for being the long term owner responsible for what happened.
Of course, and that is where you accept the results of the fine and pay your portion of the responsibility.
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@momurda said in Non-IT News Thread:
@DustinB3403 That is a terrible idea and how people go bankrupt. Ill just hold on to my Eastman Kodak shares...
WHY SHOULDNT THE FINE BE 100% OF GOOGLE'S PROFIT FOR A YEAR?Why should there be? Answer it in reverse. I've made it really clear, I though, why it should never be like that. If you think that it should be, explain the logic for why it should be 100%. And why not 1% or 1000%. How is your 100% number not absolutely arbitrary?
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With that logic, every speeding ticket should carry a fine of 100% of your income. Every ticket. Whether you go over by 1mph, or drive 200mph through a school zone. One fine for all offences, and based on your total disposable income for one year.
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@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
With that logic, every speeding ticket should carry a fine of 100% of your income. Every ticket. Whether you go over by 1mph, or drive 200mph through a school zone. One fine for all offences, and based on your total disposable income for one year.
So if you steal a car, while being homeless and jobless your fine would be 0%?
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@momurda said in Non-IT News Thread:
Another example earlier this year, Wells Fargo committed fraud for 10 years on millions of their own customers. The fine, 100 million dollars after they stole billions. Not a single member of the management was arrested. What is the incentive for them to stop doing this?
$100m of incentive. Lack of customer loyalty (which will cost them far more.) Fear of a bigger fine next time. Investors that won't allow that risk.
There is incentive. After ten years, do you punish existing staff when the owners and managers that committed the fraud are long gone? At some point, the fine has no purpose.
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@momurda said in Non-IT News Thread:
@DustinB3403 There already exists mechanisms to do this. You, however, and many others think and act as if corporations are above the law. So nothing is done to stop their illegal activities. As proof: Wells Fargo, Google.
If that is the case, then the government has determined, as the representative of the citizens, that the companies ARE above the law. The voters get to choose if they like how the country is run. If they don't change the status quo, it means that they want the status quo.
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@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
@momurda said in Non-IT News Thread:
@DustinB3403 There already exists mechanisms to do this. You, however, and many others think and act as if corporations are above the law. So nothing is done to stop their illegal activities. As proof: Wells Fargo, Google.
If that is the case, then the government has determined, as the representative of the citizens, that the companies ARE above the law. The voters get to choose if they like how the country is run. If they don't change the status quo, it means that they want the status quo.
Or another way to think about it is that the population of the country didn't think of "this act" until it was done, and has decided it is illegal now.