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Businesses The Almighty Buck Technology

Replace 'Tech' With 'Banks,' and We've Seen a Big Comeuppance Before (nytimes.com) 116

Nathaniel Popper, writing for The New York Times: When I moved to the Bay Area two years ago, it was with a sense of relief. Relief from New York winters and deteriorating subways, yes. But also relief after six years of covering Wall Street, an industry that had moved from one crisis to another after the financial crash of 2008, drawing the unending wrath of the public. In California I was joining a growing team of reporters covering Silicon Valley, which had quickly become the new engine of the economy. Just like Wall Street before it lost its luster, the tech industry had become the destination of choice for the top college graduates. I would be writing about a place where everyone was focused more on the future than on the past.

Now, just two years after getting here, and a decade after the start of the financial crisis, I have a creeping sense of deja vu as I go about my job. Admiration of the tech world has, in the wake of a growing list of scandals, quickly soured into an intense suspicion that manages to cross partisan lines, similar to what Wall Street faced after 2008 [Editor's note: the link may be paywalled]. As I have watched the recent parade of tech executives being grilled by Washington lawmakers from across the political spectrum, it has been eerily reminiscent of the combative hearings the big banks faced back in 2009 and 2010. As was true after the financial crisis, the backlash against tech rises out of a public awakening to the integral role that these huge companies occupy in our society -- with Facebook, Uber and Twitter playing the part that Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase did a decade ago.

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Replace 'Tech' With 'Banks,' and We've Seen a Big Comeuppance Before

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  • What comeuppance? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 10, 2018 @04:54PM (#57286584)

    The banks appear to have continued fucking everyone, so whatever their comeuppance was, it was not enough. Surely the response towards tech will be even weaker.

  • Big Backlash? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Monday September 10, 2018 @04:55PM (#57286594) Homepage Journal

    The banks are still running everything. They got a bailout and they got to keep the properties on which they knowingly sold bad mortgages for which they got bailed out. We paid for those homes and didn't even get them. Tell me again about this "big backlash".

    • Who sets mortgage underwriting standards?

      Who runs the secondary mortgage market?

      Both questions have the same answer...Freddy and Fanny. They own a big share of that mess. Banks are going to 'bank'. Freddy and fanny were supposed to regulate bank behavior, but were used for social engineering, with disastrous outcome.

    • Wake me up when US tech companies' activities cause a meltdown of the US economy; then we can talk about tech companies replacing the banks.
      • In this context, data is money, so there is a similarity in terms of value and increasing regulation.

        Do large tech companies present system risk in the same way banks do? If they deal with communication or power infrastructure, for example, probably.
      • Re:Big Backlash? (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 10, 2018 @05:48PM (#57286902)

        Wake me up when US tech companies' activities cause a meltdown of the US economy;

        It already happened once, in 1999. The dot-com crash rippled through the economy, and the sector is much larger now, and just as prone to bubbles.

        • by mjwx ( 966435 )

          Wake me up when US tech companies' activities cause a meltdown of the US economy;

          It already happened once, in 1999. The dot-com crash rippled through the economy, and the sector is much larger now, and just as prone to bubbles.

          And it's getting ready to happen again. There is simply too much money flying about and not much to show for it.

          The big boys like Google, Microsoft, Amazon, et al. I suspect will come though completely unscathed. Its the companies with no plans for profitability, in fact no business plan beyond "be disruptive and be noticed" like Uber, Tesla, et al, who'll go bust. The good news is it'll only hurt those invested heavily in these businesses, either financially or emotionally.

          The biggest issue we'll hav

      • by HiThere ( 15173 )

        Well, the Experian security hole, that doesn't seem to have been fixed, could cause this to happen. I suspect that there are others that just haven't seen as much public notice. But even Experian didn't see any reason to change their practices.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I think he mean the S&L scandal where all those bankers went to jail for trillions of .. oh, wait... sorry, one of the instrumental players in that fiasco became president. my bad.

    • The banks are still running everything. They got a bailout and they got to keep the properties on which they knowingly sold bad mortgages for which they got bailed out. We paid for those homes and didn't even get them. Tell me again about this "big backlash".

      Yeah, and who was responsible for that? Well, Bush signed it into law, but Obama and McCain both supported it. And Obama doubled down on those bailouts during his presidency.

      • Yeah, and who was responsible for that? Well, Bush signed it into law, but Obama and McCain both supported it. And Obama doubled down on those bailouts during his presidency.

        What a coincidence, Bush, Obama, and McCain are/were all war criminals.

        If you think I'm a fan of any of those guys, you've got another think coming. The best thing I have to say about Obama is that I far preferred him to Trump, but you know what they say about faint praise.

        • If you think I'm a fan of any of those guys, you've got another think coming.

          True enough. You are a fan of are even more corrupt politicians and even worse war criminals.

          • True enough. You are a fan of are even more corrupt politicians and even worse war criminals.

            Name one.

    • by pots ( 5047349 )
      There's been considerable backlash, just not enough to overcome partisanship. It appears that nothing is enough for that nowadays.
  • It's really Simple (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 10, 2018 @05:00PM (#57286622)

    Once a corporation gets big enough, it looses any soul it may have had. It's structural and systemic.

    Tech is really boring these days. Back in the 90's when the net was taking off and interesting things were happening with computers (and a lot of tech companies still had some soul), one could at least naively believe in it. I did -- naively. I ran an Internet company -- I was "democratizing information" -- and thought I was doing social good.

    It's all so about the money now even the naive can't believe it all.

    • Size plays a role, but I do not think it is the only or main reason. Instead I think that companies lose their soul when the original owners take it public.

      Instead of focusing on what the company strives for, more effort is spent appeasing stock holders. They could care less what the company does as long as it makes money. If you told some of those blue bloods that their share value would double if the company burned kittens in the street, those assholes would bring them in by the sack load.

      Meanwhile,
    • by Kjella ( 173770 )

      I was "democratizing information" -- and thought I was doing social good.

      "Many forms of Government have been tried, and will be tried in this world of sin and woe. No one pretends that democracy is perfect or all-wise. Indeed, it has been said that democracy is the worst form of Government except all those others that have been tried from time to time." -- Winston Churchill

      Democratizing information has exactly the same problem, give them the whole Internet to choose from and some will pick Alex Jones as their source of news. Compared to the old days when I could only access the

  • This is an example of a false equivalence. The reason is that banking doesn't actually produce anything. Seriously, it doesn't make money, it just transfers money away from other people. Technology firms actually produce something, be it software or hardware, it's still something. Whatever that something is, it's going to keep being new as long as people have needs or desires. Sure, no one city lasts forever but it's a given.

  • The solution to the banking crisis was regulation and control, which in today's age likely drives technical solutions (need an data archiving solution that can pull records in X amount of time? IT solution....). Breaking up big banks? Great, more entities that need new datacenters, more bandwidth, new IT staff, etc...

    In the tech industry, regulation and control begets more technology and will drive demand and innovation for smarter, more integrated solutions. Facebook will look at "regulation" as a coding p

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      Breaking up big banks? Great, more entities that need new datacenters, more bandwidth, new IT staff, etc...

      Why would that necessarily be the case? If you split an org into 2, typically each will need about half the IT resources it did before. If many banks need similar software, then dedicated application companies can fill the void by selling common software to avoid reinventing the wheel. I've worked for many companies who used off-the-shelf industry-specific software, or at least partially customized v

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I feel both of these apply:

    Investigative reporters find bad things when they actually start investigating something...

    News Reporters trying to make a name for themselves only report the bad things when they investigate something...

  • by Kiwikwi ( 2734467 ) on Monday September 10, 2018 @05:05PM (#57286654)

    So in other words, we can expect a few years of increased scrutiny, and then everything will be back to business as usual for the tech companies.

    • Pretty much. Tech companies are this year's focus of "everybody look busy for the camera". They'll move on to something else in time for the 2020 election cycle.
  • Not tech (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Monday September 10, 2018 @05:08PM (#57286678)

    Facebook is an advertising company.
    Uber is a taxi service.
    Twitter is an internet message board (ok, that's sort-of tech).
    Google is an advertising company.

    Actual tech companies aren't having the same troubles.

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      HP? Sun?
      Apple seems to be running into problems, too. Just yesterday I read about a different prominent system vendor with financial problems.

      Saying they aren't having the same problems is probably accurate, depending on how you describe the problems, but they sure are having problems.

  • by iggymanz ( 596061 ) on Monday September 10, 2018 @05:18PM (#57286742)

    this stuff goes in cycles in many industries

    get used to it, bail and get a job in different area on the downward side

  • by Anonymous Coward

    The press is having an insane moral panic. Literally, someone writing for the Times just compared Facebook -- whose big crime is that if you were clicking on links to Farmville quizzes back in 2010, then advertisers got a copy of your friends list -- to bankers who intentionally acted in a way the led to thousands of job losses and foreclosures. These aren't even in the same UNIVERSE of wrongs.

  • It's simple: power corrupts. It's not just about which sector or organization type (gov't, non-profit, conglomerates, etc.) It's Human Nature 101. Checks and balances are needed on everything. It's a rare accident that an entity with power stays nice, and may not continue*. Any org who claims they can self regulate should be whipped with a wet noodle.

    It's also the case that the Internet has a bigger influence on our lives. Start-up antics hurt only a handful, but missteps with widely used services can have

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      Power doesn't always corrupt, but that's the safe way to bet. And I agree that checks and balances are needed on everything. But there's a problem there:
      Who ensures that the folks at the top of the power chain properly adhere to the checks and balances? Who defines the proper balance?

      To put it classically:
      Qui custodiet ipsos custodes?
      Who will watch those selfsame watchmen?

      In a way, this is the kind of problem that blockchains were designed to address. It's just not clear either that they successfully do

      • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

        Power doesn't always corrupt

        I had agreed there were rare exceptions.

        Who ensures that the folks at the top of the power chain properly adhere to the checks and balances? Who defines the proper balance?

        Hopefully voters. Democracies can crash on themselves when one large party or group is okay with destroying checks-and-balances in order to get more power NOW, downplaying the future side-effects. It's sort of collective anarchy.

        China did away with their limited C&B by making Xi the supreme ruler. I'll bet

  • I've managed to go my entire life without ever once finding any need for Facebook, Twitter, or even Uber which at least provides an actually practical service unlike the first two.

    Good fucking luck going through life without ever needing a mortgage though.

    Banks control all of the actual productive capital of the world. So-called "tech companies" like those listed aren't even actually tech companies, they just make products that use technology. The first two are comparable to makers of fucking video games. T

    • Actual tech companies are the people who build the computers and, even more importantly, the people who operate the networks between them.

      While they do other things, google [for example] is actively funding the development of new algorithms. How is that not a tech company? Those other examples are the same, of course, google is just most obvious.

  • "Admiration of the tech world has, in the wake of a growing list of scandals."

    That's because people are desperate to be saved by non-humans. They want an app to change their world, not a person. They want a smartphone, not a philosophy. They would rather some form of modern technology revolutionize the simplification and security of their lives and possessions than accept that a comfortable life requires a lot of work. And they'll accept/believe a whole lot of BS just to ease their minds into believing that

  • If the comparison stands, it is bad news: 10 years after the subprime crisis, big finance has spared significant regulation hardening. Will silicon valley enjoy the same situation?
  • It must be really depressing when you can't base your career on sucking billionaire cocks all day.
  • Good. People should be suspicious. They'll still be mostly ignorant of what they're suspicious of, but it's an improvement.

  • Nathaniel Popper, writing for The New York Times: When I moved to the Bay Area two years ago, it was with a sense of relief. Relief from New York winters and deteriorating subways, yes. But also relief after six years of covering Wall Street,

    Covering Wall St., covering High Tech, it's all the same to a NYT reporter: it's not like their work requires any competence or insight into what they are reporting about, and it shows in their writing. I'm glad I stopped reading that rag a decade ago.

  • A NYT's article? So, the ramblings of a 20 year old that doesn't know shit, basically. I doubt he even knows how to pronounce "San Tomas Expressway" correctly.

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