• @minoscopede@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    I read the article, and it’s way less bad than the title made it sound. They just set company chats to disappear after some number of days and told employees to not “comment before you have all the facts.” This has been the policy of every company I’ve worked at, including university IT and Amazon.

    The title made it sound like they were deleting specifically chats related to open court cases, which is like level 10 ultra-illegal.

  • Phoenixz
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    631 day ago

    And again, that should result in jail time for all of those executives and all employees that actually destroyed messages

    JAIL THEM, JAIL THEM NOW, JAIL THEM LONG

    This sort of shit behavior will never end and only get worse until we, instead of hand slapping, start jailing these fuckers.

    Jail a bunch of CEO’s for breaking the law and watch how fast they start behaving.

    • @dogs0n@sh.itjust.works
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      921 hours ago

      Either of us deliberately destroy data: locked up.

      Company exec does the same: slap on the butt and a $2 fine.

      We should all be on the same playing field!

  • @sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 day ago

    Thats uh… thats a gigantic crime rofl, fucking wow.

    Not quite sure exactly what that slots into, tampering with evidence, obstruction of justice, not complying with the discovery process… but uh yeah wow dang, that’s the kinda thing that can actually lead to charges against the actual people that do this, if not at least the people that order other to.

    Great job, morons!

    … fucking megacorp version of ‘the discord channel got leaked, nuke everything!’, especially if these directives were newly enacted after any of the anti trust suits began.

    • 𞋴𝛂𝛋𝛆
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      271 day ago

      Musk is still free and has been openly doing this with self driving junk for years. This is the USA where we haven’t had reasonable laws passed since the 1970s.

    • Phoenixz
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      111 day ago

      Nah, nothing will happen. At worst they get slapped on the hands with a few million dollars, and no one will care.

      Jail these fuckers, jail them for long times, jail them now

    • @spooky2092@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      11 day ago

      Not quite sure exactly what that slots into, tampering with evidence, obstruction of justice, not complying with the discovery process.

      Pretty sure that’s a hat trick

  • Baron Von J
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    221 day ago

    This is why companies have data retention settings to automatically delete old emails and slack/teams/etc. and special processes a classifications to store those communications that relate to contracts and such.

  • Jo Miran
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    512 days ago

    These types of requests always backfire. We got a similar request when I worked for a very large corporation and the very first thing I did was create a backup of our Lotus Notes and take it home. Just in case.

            • @tempest@lemmy.ca
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              81 day ago

              I mean they were built to make money, the fact that you can send them a national security letter is just a happy accident that keeps the NSA from having to run more datacenters.

              • StinkyFingerItchyBum
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                11 day ago

                I respectfully disagree. They were built for power and control. Monestisation just paid for it and helped adoption.

                • @spooky2092@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                  1 day ago

                  I think you’ve got it backwards. Like the other person said, this shit was built to make money, the power and control came later. Said power and control also came partially from the money, since money is just power coupons, and they used that to buy up competitors and regulators alike to get to the state their in now.

                  Not everything is built with evil intentions. Quite frequently, evil corrupts otherwise benign institutions as they gain power to serve the ends of those already in power.

              • StinkyFingerItchyBum
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                21 day ago

                Dead people also have no claim on the present or future. You can own more, even when the pie is shrinking if you negate others claims.

          • ☂️-
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            01 day ago

            they already are.

            its been a while since snowden leaked that to us.

          • sunzu2
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            -32 days ago

            My dear child… They are already doing this. Us and Israeli spooks already infiltrated all mega corps. Mega corps know and collaborate.

            All of them are balls deep helping waffen IDF do a genocide…

            They help ice gestapo to target people within the US…

            These examples are merely what has been publicly documented.

        • Beej Jorgensen
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          82 days ago

          Yes, it’s a lot worse. The particular difference is that one of these organizations has the power to disappear you without consequence.

        • @vivendi@programming.dev
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          21 day ago

          I know people like to hate on google, but google is actually like 3 companies in a trench coat.

          They do highly valuable open source / open ecosystem work (I will say the chance of you indirectly using a google tool without knowing is over 90% now) and if the American government, a capitalist fascist government no less, gets their hands on it, we’re fucked

          Not all of google is adsense or YouTube.

      • ☂️-
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        1 day ago

        they already have these companies wiretapped since the early 2000s

    • Are you kidding?? They are way more accountable now to Wall Street and what’s left of US federal regulators and still-useful regulators like the EU. If nationalized they would answer to no one.

    • TheTechnician27
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      62 days ago

      I read this as “incinerate”. A principled, pragmatic opposition to the death penalty in any case I can think of is the only reason I would disapprove.

  • kingthrillgore
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    131 day ago

    First thing I do when I’m told to delete messages is SecureDrop them to the press

  • Ulrich
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    202 days ago

    I’ve always wondered, is this illegal? Like obviously it is if they’ve already been subpoenaed or something.

    • @Khanzarate@lemmy.world
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      392 days ago

      Nah it’s illegal to deliberately destroy data to impede investigations. You don’t need to have an open investigation for that to be the case.

      It remains legal to get rid of old files to free up space or if you genuinely believe they aren’t necessary, though, so you need to prove intent.

      If there’s a subpeona or something, their destruction is itself a crime, but under this law, its the intent to defraud the courts that’s illegal, and that intent is always illegal.

      The law exists specifically for this situation. Purging important business documents preemptively is clearly not OK.

      Citation: https://legalclarity.org/18-u-s-c-1519-destruction-alteration-or-falsification-of-records/

      • enkers
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        2 days ago

        Just to add, if it’s found that evidence was destroyed, beyond potential seperate charges for the destruction itself, a judge would also typically give an averse inference instruction to the jury. That means the jury should assume that the destroyed evidence would have been damning to whomever destroyed it.

        What that tells me is, assuming google acted rationally in the destruction, either they think they have a reasonable chance that they can beat the evidence destruction charges, or that the evidence is so damning that the reality of the situation is considerably worse than whatever adverse inferences might be drawn.

        (I am not a lawyer, so please take my interpretation with a large grain of salt.)

        • @Khanzarate@lemmy.world
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          21 day ago

          No that seems likely.

          Evidence that would damn them here being in a court record makes it admissible elsewhere for a crime that isn’t even prosecuted yet.

          They’re cutting off their foot to save their leg, here, since this isn’t particularly secretive, seeing how we know about it.

      • JustEnoughDucks
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        11 day ago

        Do you happen to know when the last time was that a rich company was prosecuted for this?

        It seems a lot like the perjury laws: there to scare poor people into telling the truth because of almost non-existant prosecution of it.

        And if it is a fine and not jail time (white collar crimes are almost never jail time) the fine would have to be much larger than the penalties they would not have to pay because of the crime, otherwise it is simply a net win for the company

        • @Khanzarate@lemmy.world
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          11 day ago

          Companies don’t get jail time.

          Sure, technically an individual could, but generally the actual destruction is an employee doing what they’re told to do. They’re somewhat complicit but the real problem is the c-suite people.

          I unfortunately don’t know when this last happened or any specific details on what the penalty would be, but I feel fairly confident that this law falls under the “cost of doing business” part of illegal corporate activity. I wish it didn’t.

    • Beej Jorgensen
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      42 days ago

      It’s illegal if antitrust action is anticipated, according to the article. That said, I know that most places I’ve worked have had a document retention policy that called for automatic deletion of most documents after some time period, like a year.

      • Ulrich
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        -12 days ago

        It’s illegal if antitrust action is anticipated

        That seems like something that would be difficult to prove.

        • Beej Jorgensen
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          21 day ago

          Unless they’ve received notification to that effect. “Hey, y’all, we’re considering anti-trust so save that shit.”