What i've learned from other huge fails by huge companies is that they probably get a "bad company, continue as if nothing happened." And nothing changes.. Take Volkswagen for example. They intentionally cheat the system, fast forward 5 years and i really see no difference in the amount of new cars being sold by them nor did anybody and up in jail or anything. Same goes for any banks when it comes to money laundering or big pharma when it comes to addictive drugs.

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You're wrong with that example. Volkswagen the company paid billions of dollars in fines after pleading guilty to criminal charges, and on top of that, Volkswagen employees and executives were also charged with criminal charges. For example, engineer Oliver Schmidt was sentenced to 7 years in jail and served half of it before being released on probation. I'm not arguing anything fundamentally new. I'm arguing that we should increase the effectiveness of penalties like this by throwing more people in jail with harsher sentences.
Hmm whoops i really fucked up my homework on this one then. ๐Ÿ˜… I wish the punishment would come from the customer base instead though. But like with most other things the general public does not really seem to understand or care too much even though they are the victim.
They were not cheating. They were attempting to protect themselves from attackers. Unfortunately unsucessfully.
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