This is interesting. This is not an isolated incident. There was a saboteur in Tesla, and it appears that a lot of major companies have been trying to undermine him for a while. So suddenly a diver starts suing from multiple countries? Something is weird here.
A diver suddenly starts suing? No, the guy criticized Elon Musk as an amateur who was distracting from the actual rescue with an impractical solution. Musk's ego got bruised so he claimed the guy was a pedo with zero evidence. Musk Apologized but then doubled down on his slander and made new claims about the guy. None of this happens if Musk is able to take criticism. Musk is genius, but also seems to be going through some personality issues.
There was a coder who wrote bad code because they were not promoted. I find that to be bullshit. In IT if you have a good pedigree, and are disrespected in any way, you can leave for a better job in a day. This person could have made a resume, put it out there, and been out the door in a day.
while this sabotage was going on, a lot of investment companies were suspiciously bearish over Tesla, like they knew this was going on. A lot of aerospace companies want to see musk taken out.
Now in the instance of this cave diver, where the hell did he get the money and the means for THREE lawsuits in other countries?
Thanks for this. I wasn't aware of this. However, this appears to an inside disgruntled employee, rather than some coordinated campaign.
Interestingly, the alleged-saboteur, Martin Tripp, claims to be a whistleblower
6/19/18 I was fired by Tesla for providing disturbing information to the media in regards to extremely unsafe batteries/modules, unsafe production methods, and inconsistencies in numbers of cars produced as told by Elon Musk to investors and the general public.
Here's something I would like to know what effect Tesla claims the sabotage took. No coder should be able to push their code to a production system without controls. That's the case for everyday honest coders sincerely doing their job. Because while they may fix the one thing they are working on, it may break something else unexpectedly. Or the combination of multiple coders work may break something. This is routine in the software, which is why testing on staging environments before being released to production is standard practice, this is why tools to roll back a code deployment to prior state are standard practice in software.
Now in the instance of this cave diver, where the hell did he get the money and the means for THREE lawsuits in other countries?
Why do you think this would take very much money? Especially if his case is strong, many lawyers would take a small fee or no fee upfront as a bet they would might win big money against a billionaire. You know that lawyers often win part of a settlement right?
In a contingent fee arrangement, the lawyer agrees to accept a fixed percentage (often one third) of the recovery, which is the amount finally paid to the client. If you win the case, the lawyer's fee comes out of the money awarded to you.
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senpaithatignoresyou ago
This is interesting. This is not an isolated incident. There was a saboteur in Tesla, and it appears that a lot of major companies have been trying to undermine him for a while. So suddenly a diver starts suing from multiple countries? Something is weird here.
Are_we_sure ago
A saboteur in Tesla? What are you talking about?
A diver suddenly starts suing? No, the guy criticized Elon Musk as an amateur who was distracting from the actual rescue with an impractical solution. Musk's ego got bruised so he claimed the guy was a pedo with zero evidence. Musk Apologized but then doubled down on his slander and made new claims about the guy. None of this happens if Musk is able to take criticism. Musk is genius, but also seems to be going through some personality issues.
senpaithatignoresyou ago
https://www.techrepublic.com/article/tesla-employee-sabotage-illustrates-critical-importance-of-user-permissions/
There was a coder who wrote bad code because they were not promoted. I find that to be bullshit. In IT if you have a good pedigree, and are disrespected in any way, you can leave for a better job in a day. This person could have made a resume, put it out there, and been out the door in a day.
while this sabotage was going on, a lot of investment companies were suspiciously bearish over Tesla, like they knew this was going on. A lot of aerospace companies want to see musk taken out.
Now in the instance of this cave diver, where the hell did he get the money and the means for THREE lawsuits in other countries?
Are_we_sure ago
Thanks for this. I wasn't aware of this. However, this appears to an inside disgruntled employee, rather than some coordinated campaign.
Interestingly, the alleged-saboteur, Martin Tripp, claims to be a whistleblower
https://www.teslarati.com/teala-former-employee-sabotage-crowdfunding-500k-lawsuit/
Here's something I would like to know what effect Tesla claims the sabotage took. No coder should be able to push their code to a production system without controls. That's the case for everyday honest coders sincerely doing their job. Because while they may fix the one thing they are working on, it may break something else unexpectedly. Or the combination of multiple coders work may break something. This is routine in the software, which is why testing on staging environments before being released to production is standard practice, this is why tools to roll back a code deployment to prior state are standard practice in software.
The saboteur/whistleblower tweeted out several allegations before his lawyer told him to close this account. His lawyer is representing another "whistleblower" against Tesla. https://www.engadget.com/2018/08/15/martin-tripp-tesla-tweets/
Interestingly, both are claiming issues with how Tesla stores raw materials such as copper. Interesting combination of High Tech and Old School metal.
Are_we_sure ago
Why do you think this would take very much money? Especially if his case is strong, many lawyers would take a small fee or no fee upfront as a bet they would might win big money against a billionaire. You know that lawyers often win part of a settlement right?
There are multiple examples of lawyers winning 9 figure contigency fees. https://www.quora.com/What-is-the-biggest-fee-that-a-law-firm-has-received-for-a-single-case#
Pizzalawyer ago
AWS: You are right again Are you going to law school?
Are_we__sure ago
No. If I went back to school I might go for psychology. The ability of people to be immune to evidence is quite something.
Pizzalawyer ago
See, I get downvoted by just agreeing with you. And I'll agree again regarding the lack of critical thinking.
Narcissism ago
Oh, the old Neurotypical denial mechanism - not a luxury we're afforded in Psychopathy....