Are the Silicon Valley fraudsters today's Robber Barons?
Consider what
Twitter officials denied that they were "shadow-banning" even while actively engaged in "visibility filtering" — pretty much the same thing. From their stronghold headquarters on
The second story is the sentencing of
SBF, as he was often called, was a "woke capitalist," dressed in baggy T-shirts and shorts, playing video games during interviews. He celebrated himself as a practitioner of "effective altruism." He was reputed to be the second largest contributor (
SBF was headquartered in the
Bankman-Fried's gaudy success evidently gave him the confidence to submit earlier to an interview, surely contrary to legal advice, with a New York Times reporter, and to agree to give congressional testimony this week, until the government's perhaps conveniently timed indictment spared him from potentially damaging admissions.
Are these
While some business titans of yore profited from frauds, most benefited society by transforming great technological advances — the greatest ever, tech historian
They didn't amass fortunes by robbing people. And indeed, they gave back, too. Carnegie's libraries helped educate generations; Rockefeller created modern research hospitals; Morgan set an example of fine arts connoisseurship.
Their rise does have something in common with that of their pre-1914 predecessors. In "The Power Law," his recent account of
Similarly, in his testimony before a House committee in 1912, Morgan asserted that investing in an enterprise depended, as one historian summarized, "not on any material substance of system of accounting, but on the character of the borrower and lender."
Relying on character evidently makes sense in a time of rapid technological change for investors looking not for safety but for bonanza profits. But judgments of character are fallible and, as innovation ripens into fashion, can be swayed by moralistic appeals. Old
These fraudsters don't entirely discredit
The post BARONE: Are the
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