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Seems dangerous for the birds.

Maybe attack drones that can shoot string - since practically every drone uses rotors.



GS already has a rotten reputation. I don’t think they care.

As for the executives, they will probably hide behind limited liability. Getting the US to hand them over will not be easy.


Why do you say that GS has a rotten reputation? They are probably the most respected bank on Wall St.

Also, I know for a fact that they really care about their reputation, and that internally, they are stressing about this.


On main street, GS is known as the "great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like money"


Their reputation "on main street" is largely irrelevant to them.


Well they took a huge hit with their investors when leading up to the 2008 real estate bubble they were pushing and selling toxic assets to their clients, while they were liquidating their own positions of those very assets.

Initially they claimed there was no conflict of interest and that’s simply how finance works, but then internal communication leaks showed they knew the assets they were selling clients were not just shit (but knew the underlying mortgages were fraudulent themselves going back to 2005) and they were doing that in mass as part of an effort to artificially prop the asset value up as they were liquidating their own.

It all came out in a case they settled for $5B with the government. From the department of justice : “This $5 billion settlement includes a $1.8 billion commitment to help repair the damage to homeowners and communities that Goldman acknowledges resulted from its conduct, and it makes clear that no institution may inflict this type of harm on investors and the American public without serious consequences.”

yet they still operate, are more powerful than ever, and there is a revolving door with them and top levels of government...so I agree with you reputation is irrelevant to them. Plain and simple everyone knows they are scumbag oligarchs at the top of that organization, but they are oligarchs nonetheless.

https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/goldman-sachs-agrees-pay-more...


Their stock price is down ~40% YTD.


> irrelevant

And so is Malaysia


Why does anyone care then?


Some people take the ferengi viewpoint - if you made a profit and got away with it, you are successful HARD STOP.


Well on "main st," Trump is the messiah. So maybe we shouldn't really care what they think.


Are you aware that the major players on Wall Street and Mainstreet all donated to Clinton far more than Trump? Clinton’s corporate contributions dwafted Trumps.

I mean, I’m not fan of Trump but to say he is looked upon favorably by corporations over his opponent is verifiably untrue. Let alone claims of “the messiah”.


FYI for those not getting the reference, "Main Street" is typically used to refer to investors who aren't large institutions, in contrast to "Wall Street". https://www.investopedia.com/terms/m/mainstreet.asp

(Neither of these terms are particularly accurate—I used to work a block away from Wall Street, and all the actual trading happened by ssh to New Jersey—but they're metonyms with specific meanings.)


mruts said the opposite.


"We" ? You are probably underestimating the number of trump supporters on HN (and in the tech scene in general)


Funny how a news article can influence forum dialogue almost a decade later.

Good journalists are worth gold


Catchy soundbites != good journalism.


Let's see, where to begin. Their role in 2008 crisis, the commodities bubbles (food, metals, oil) they deliberately created, their role in the collapse of the Greek economy, countless examples of stock price manipulation, insider trading, securities fraud, ripping off their own customers repeatedly and so on.

I don't think there is another investment bank on Wall St that has had its short term greed and disregard for society exposed to the degree that GS has.


>"Why do you say that GS has a rotten reputation?"

Do you not know about the subprime mortgage product they sold ? It was notable in that it was designed to fail i.e they defrauded investors

see:

http://fortune.com/2016/04/11/goldman-sachs-doj-settlement/

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07...

http://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1983886...

>"They are probably the most respected bank on Wall St"

Respected by who exactly? Other investment banks constantly mired in their own scandals and white collar crime.

Here's some other Goldman highlights:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goldman_Sachs_controversies


There reputation on Main Street has been bad for a while now.


But is it justified? Do people actually know what Wall St does?

I would expect people to have more animosity for consumer facing banks like Wells Fargo or Bank of America as their nickel and diming practices actually hurt average people.

I doubt your average joe even knows what GS does beyond being a “vampire squid.”


Those are two different questions.

I don't think we can reasonably expect everybody to really know everything. Wall Street in particular is a highly complex world, where only some of that complexity is really necessary. I've been reading the financial press since before I was in high school and spent years working in the industry. I don't feel like I fully understand it, and I'm sure I never will.

That said, I think the reputation is reasonably justified. Many smart people have pointed out that the financial sector has increased drastically in size, soaking up an awful lot of money relative to the value it creates in the economy. I'm sure people do dislike their banks, but at least those banks do something for them. Goldman Sachs extracts billions from the economy and doesn't do jack for average people. If those average people hear from people closer to the problem that Goldman Sachs is a vampire squid, I don't think it's unreasonable of them to trust that and tie it to their very reasonable economic resentments.


Neither does Oracle, MemSQL, Mongo, MSSQL, C#, Java, or anything we technical folk talk about. That doesn’t mean it doesn’t create value for the world.


It doesn't mean it doesn't, but it doesn't mean it does.

Oracle in particular is an interesting example here. Their revenues are $40 billion per year. I know for a fact that some of that revenue is from companies that are stuck using Oracle for historical reasons; they wouldn't use it if they were starting fresh today with, say, Postegres. Oracle surely knows this, and so has an extractive, rentier approach to pricing.

Are they a company that creates $40 billion in value every year? I doubt it. Is it possible that net of costs, they are a net negative? Definitely.

This is even more true with financial companies, who act as intermediaries or are external actors to transactions. I used to work for a proprietary trading firm. We had no customers. Our job was to go into the markets and turn a pile of money into a bigger pile of money. As market-makers, we provided a little more liquidity to the markets. But did we create societal value in line with how much money we extracted? I sure don't think so. Which is part of why after a few years I got out and never went back.


Why does it matter if Goldman Sachs doesn't do jack for average people? Neither does SpaceX, or Virgin Galactic, or Tesla Motors. Companies specialize in whatever field they want, and some make the conscious decision to cater to a certain clientele.


We're talking about public perception of a company, so whether people find them personally useful is definitely one factor in that.

Another factor surely is notional utility. Even if somebody buys a different car, they can understand what Tesla might do for them. They might never fly on Virgin Galactic, but they could imagine doing it. What Goldman does is something most people will not only never need, but would have a very hard time imagining that they need.


But they do. They provide services people pay for.

GS OTOH is a meta entity that moves your assets around in a never ending quest to find bigger fools willing to pay more than they did to acquire them. There is literally nothing useful about it and eventually it destroys the value of your assets once there are no more fools left. But it’s legal because they seek out and fund, make rich (IPO), or (apparently) pay off enough socially important people that the practice is allowed to slide. And it’s sure nice when you get the modest kick backs to your account, amirite? Let’s just hope the supply of fools never runs out and we can keep growing money forever. Not an unsafe bet either, unfortunately.

Put another way, what the corporations you cited do is called produce goods. It’s the economic model in many places and despit capitalism having its own set of problems at least companies produce things that people pay for. There are many useful services the financial industry supplies but here we are talking about the guts of how the investment banking subsector operates. If the industry was honest 2008 wouldn’t have happened. When was the last time Tesla royally fucked over your personal assets?


>"But is it justified?"

Yes, any time you defraud investors the damage done to your reputation is more than justified:

http://fortune.com/2016/04/11/goldman-sachs-doj-settlement/

>"I doubt your average joe even knows what GS does beyond being a “vampire squid.”"

Yes and even sophisticated investors(hedgefunds) did not know what GS does when they bought their Abacus synthetic CDO product and were hookwinked:

https://sevenpillarsinstitute.org/case-studies/goldman-sachs...


> I doubt your average joe even knows what GS does beyond being a “vampire squid.”

..which is a prime example of bad reputation. Reputation, does not care about justification, it just exists once it started existing.

It must be tempting for GS to just not care about their reputation on main street since they don't engage in that kind of business, but the business they do engage in does not get easier when everyone they might want to interact with is carefully weighing the benefits against the risk of getting tainted by association.


Well, strangely enough a recent study seems to indicate that a reputation for being evil is actually good for attracting investment banking type business https://insight.jbs.cam.ac.uk/2018/beneficial-wrongdoing/


Why am I not surprised :(

(sorry for the low effort answer)


>I doubt your average joe even knows what GS does beyond being a “vampire squid.”

I guess the question is whether it matters what the average joe thinks. If it does, then GS is in a bad place because all the joes I know wouldn't touch them with a 10ft pole. If not, then we only need to consider what the financial folks think (which I can't speak to).


Well, it's not just Main Street that dislikes GS. They've done plenty wrong, benefited from the bailout, and are accused of being crony capitalists(1).

1-https://theintercept.com/2016/12/09/trump-makes-america-gold...


> what GS does beyond being a “vampire squid.”

Did anyone know what actually GS do anyway? Yes, they are an investment bank, they are dealing with money, they are going after ever bigger margin for profit. But how they get there is anyone's guess, and doubt there are that many people in the whole world understand what exactly GS did to get those money.

Average joes might not know what GS is, as with most of us here on HN, but they surely feel pain that the investment bankings brought to them. In that sense, 'vampire squid' is actually quite useful metaphor: It is mystical, it is malicious.


Speaking as a somewhat average joe, we dislike Bank of America for giving us terrible service and hitting us with obnoxious fees, but we really hate Goldman Sachs & friends for torpedoing the entire American economy with their greedy fraud.

Wall Street investment banks have a much, much worse reputation than ordinary retail banks.


The hypocrisy of this site is staggering. Any one of these “growth hackers” would jump at the chance of Goldman running their IPO.


Sure, but how many Main Streeters need to securitize their bond offering, hedge their massive foreign currency holdings or take their startup public in Hong Kong?

The only consumer product I know of is a savings account from Marcus.com, and since it’s a brand new product, the growth is strongly positive.


That respect, I think, is more for its success than its probity.


On wall street they are the most respected bank for making money, but as for whether the other banks trust them...


Goldman Sachs may be a popular whipping boy for politicians, but within the sphere of high finance that isn't the case.


Yeah. 250,000 people apply for summer internships at Goldman Sachs each year. They are a highly sought employer.


As Adam Smith said in "The Wealth of Nations":

“People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some contrivance to raise prices.”

This description fits Goldman Sachs to a "T". And I think they would probably like the description, given its origin.

So, to be clear, Goldman Sachs are capitalists.


One of my favorite quotes. To think someone wrote something so specific and valid for centuries.


Interpol warrants will imprison them in the US.


GS already has a rotten reputation. I don’t think they care.

Both point are also true for Facebook, if you want an example closer to our industry, to understand the people and motives involved.


A life contained only to the US is still miserable for the jet set spoiled. There is good chance they will leave US eventually and be Huaweied to Malaysia.


Has "Huaweied" entered our common lexicon already?


The strange thing is that there’s already a word for it: “extradited”.


Or "shanghaied" for ironic flair.


Seems it has.


Don't think so. I'm having a hard time figuring out what it actually means. No urbandictionary entry, and the only other time it seems to have been used was another HN thread last month.


In case you actually don't know (not an insult, just not sure)...

The CFO of Huawei was arrested in Canada for extradition to the US.

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/05/business/huawei-cfo-arres...


"Extradited", re: recent news about their CFO being detained in Canada on a US charge


Why would you not believe that? Changing phones isn’t a big deal when upgrading.

Guess the iPhone X’s full screen design was a hit - seen quite a few people on the train here with them; I’m quite surprised given the pricing of the iPhone X line, guess there are more more with cash to spare than I thought.

Maybe even some people bought the iPhone X for the gaming performance.


Such a hit that would cause a 30(!)% marketshare change?


In not putting in cause the quality of the iPhone.

But the iPhone X didn't came in mid-2018 to cause such a crackdown.


I take it GS will just walk away. It might not be worth to pay that much to operate in Malaysia.

Not to mention, people could just start a separate company if they absolutely need to do business in Malaysia.


Singapore and US are also investigating GS. There will most likely not be a "walk away".

> Singapore’s widened probe opens a potential new battle front for Goldman less than a week after Malaysia filed the first criminal charges against the firm over a relationship that spawned one of the biggest scandals in its history. Singapore is coordinating closely with the U.S. Justice Department, which is also investigating Goldman and has filed criminal charges against two former senior bankers at the firm, the people said.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-12-21/singapore...


They might get nailed in the US but I don’t think Malaysia is going to see any of that 7.5B they are asking for.


They very well may. SDNY isn't going to let customers get screwed when settling with a bank.


I don't think it's quite as simple as that:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enforcement_of_foreign_judgmen...


They don't get to walk away from criminal prosecution.


They are prosecuting the company though, not the staff.

If GS refuses to pay, the best they can do is ban them from the country. What else can they do, seriously?


They can seize their CEO's jet while fueling in, say, France, or a GS building in China or whatever. Their life will be miserable, they'd have to navigate hundreds of jurisdictions and they are "bounty hunter" types that take these cases after judgments.

But fraud is fraud, Malaysia can sue them in good, old, USA. Who thinks that GS, the paragon of integrity, behaved correctly, raise their hands. Right, zero hands.


When "too big to fail" goes to the head and gets too boisterous and risky.

Goldman Sachs did have to pay 5.1B for the Great Recession scams [1].

As long as GS can keep the "financial innovation" in Malaysia they will probably pay it after trying to reduce it, if they can't gain from it further in the future they won't.

[1] http://fortune.com/2016/04/11/goldman-sachs-doj-settlement/


Take it up at a political level I expect


Hoping the current administration would side with foreigners against one of its own banks is rather optimistic.


Putin and China has shown that they don't mind getting their hands dirty in foreign countries. Not see why any government could not hire some private operators if they are pissed enough to deliver the to Kuala Lumpur


Just 5 years?

I suppose it’s good from a rehabilitation perspective but it’s kind of weak as a deterrent - where 10 years might be more appropriate.


The perception of 5 or 10 years as a deterrent doesn't make a difference to the average person.


Actually the only psychological profile that wouldn't be deterred by 10 vs 5 years would be the psychopath (who is largely immune to punishment, and often regards it with complete serenity). An "average person" would make tremendous sacrifices to get 5 instead of 10. Plea bargain justice makes this clear.


A plea bargain is after the event though. If you have been caught and are likely to be convicted then 5 years sounds a lot better than 10. That has nothing at all to do with deterrent effects.


The thing is, an 'average person' has no real idea or mental model of what five years in prison actually entails. They haven't been locked up ever, even for shorter stretches, and most likely neither have their friends. Basically they know its bad, but with no frame of reference it gets left at that and filed away as irrelevant anyway since prison happens to other, bad people. So there's no way to make a risk calculation about e.g 6mo vs 5y sentences, they are both just vague bad things. Monetary fines work because people understand money and what losing a sum of money means because they deal with money all the time. I assume corporal punishment works too, since everyone has experience with pain?


Citation needed.

A decade in prison is twice 5 years. That’s a lot of time to waste.

Edit: Guess downvotes are abused here too ...

Edit2: Would be interesting to see how low this post will go. Guess some people don’t like their abusing of the moderation system called out.


Citation needed that longer sentences work as a deterrent.

The reason you don't steal from your coworkers has little to do with the sentence that would be imposed and a lot to do with your personal values: you know theft is wrong.

Edit: talking about downvoyes will always attract downvotes. HN's voting culture may not even what you're used to. People can down item for any, or for no, reason. A few people can down vote, but most people with an account can upvote. Corrective upvote will often be provided - there are people on HN who look for unfairly downvoted posts to supply corrective upvote.

If your post is downvoted and remains downvoted it means that someone downvoted it, and no-one else who read it thought it deserved different.

Phrases like [citation needed] are often going to get downvoted. Downvotes are likely because you're claiming prison is a deterrent and that longer sentences are a stronger deterrent with nothing to support that claim, while asking someone else to support their claim that longer sentences aren't a deterrent.


If five years won’t deter you I doubt ten would.


Why even five years?

Let the airport,airlines and insurera sue any culprits for losses. Why should I pay for their incarceration? No harm was done to persons or property.


in an ideal world, all non-physical harm would be handled this way. unfortunately, such attackers can cause multi-million dollar (or pound, in this case) losses in a short period of time and probably have minimal assets. you might get a few grand out of them if you're lucky.


It's called indentured servitude [1] and it's still practiced in the US [2], but only to benefit the state and its cronies.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indentured_servitude_in_the_Am...

[2] https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2015/09/prison-...


It works until the gravy train stops then you have a problem.

Democracy has many problems but it’s fairly robust vs discontent. Got a problem? Try to vote out the people you believe caused it. It keeps violent overthrows at bay - most of the time.


Yea the most clever part about democracy is that the system builds political revolution right into it, so no matter who is in charge the system stays.


> For a long time I sort of assumed that the advantages of living in a democracy are sort of self evident (provided you live there), I apparently was wrong.

If you are a cynic, the best part about democracies is there is a much lower chance of violent overthrows - much easier to just wait it out and vote the current leaders out next election; barring an extremely corrupt leader whose existence is irreparably damaging the country - and that’s pretty much one of the few good things about it.

Leaders trade absolute power for not having to watch their backs as closely.


I only use it to spell words I don’t know the spelling of. :p

I speak with an accent so it was always hit and miss for me - although it had gotten better in recent years.

I’m also too lazy to talk ...


What if you have forgotten the password?

(It happens. I took a break from work for 3 weeks due to chicken pox. Totally forgot all my passwords.)


You will be mistreated and thrown in jail, because they'll assume you're a criminal (and in a very literal sense you are).


Maybe WeWork is picking up left-over locations. Some rent is better than no rent.

If the landlord could find a better tenant, WeWork would have zero chance to rent any of it.


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