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- Your issue as I understand it is with Level 3 - are they an ILEC? Isn't Qwest (or a local coop) the ILEC there in Laramie? Two - you provide services a lot like a local exchange - I would guess...
- Yes, I will agree that you are not "getting me." First of all, I do not buy unbundled network elements (UNEs), nor am I a CLEC. I am a wireless ISP -- a true last mile provider and an...
- <i>I'd buy a newspaper that reported substance over he said/she said stenography mixed with tabloid fluff.</i> You might, but I think most of the evidence suggests that not very...
- This is too funny!
- Good point I Can't agree more ..... and its not if those people dnt want things to change ....
1 year ago
1 year ago
I imagine that corprorations in the aggregate make rational risk calculations about whether they'll be caught and how much they'll be punished for doing something wrong - criminal or not - just like you and I do when we drive faster than the speed limit, cut out of work early, etc.
Don't be angry at your shovel. Our task is to get the most productivity out of it at the least cost.
1 year ago
Not quite. Individuals rarely go to jail or even face criminal prosecution when corporations break the law, even in the case of outright fraud *cough*Providian*cough*(IMO). Whereas, if I as an individual were to unjustly enrich myself of a mere few hundred or a few thousand dollars I would probably face criminal proceedings.
White corporate fraud needs jail time for individuals. There must be no safety in numbers. Individuals must be accountable.
1 year ago
1 year ago
1 year ago
He then goes on to state: "The core problem here is mainly not one for business but for government. ... So my purpose here isn't to predict apocalypse but to praise transparency. The dots of opacity are there, in abundance, for all to see. ... Investors, now a hundred million strong, must be convinced that government will resume its proper job of enforcing transparency."
Which supports your call for transparency. "Transparency is a similar meta-characteristic that helps garner and protect trust. I think the absence of a call for ethics here on TLF during the Comcast Kerfuffle is the product of the fact that Comcast’s main failing was in transparency. It’s still a matter of debate whether Comcast did anything wrong. It’s almost unanimous that Comcast did something opaque, and that hurt them."
I guess that I now need to put-out a call for improved transparency regulation. Again, Thank-you for this good discussion.