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The company entity requires blaming others. It can't blame itself, otherwise stakeholder value is affected. If you want to blame anyone, blame the environment that allows these types of actions by companies, or simply stop using them.

BTW, no Twitter account is "ours". If it was, we could download everything (friends and all) and move it somewhere else. Twitter needs to take ownership of all data on their platform - user accounts included. Trying to separate them into different entities is ridiculous.



These are cogent points and I completely agree not admitting fault seems the playbook for publicly traded companies.

It’s unfolding in real-time with Tyler Technologies and we’ll have to see how it plays out. Intelligent institutional investors are poring money into a company that is responsible for leaking millions of intended to be confidential CRIMINAL RECORDS and is trying to blame JudyRecords for finding their mistake.

Again it goes to show we don’t really own anything that turns digital, and no safeguards are guaranteed. The only recourse is legal action, which is, IMHO going to bankrupt Tyler r force numerous spin offs to pay the class action results from the CA State Bar…and potentially hundreds more.[0]

The environment is one of no consequences when hiding behind a corporate banner, for most intents and purposes. Choose who you work for wisely.

[0] www.JudyRecords.com


> It can't blame itself, otherwise stakeholder value is affected.

One would think dishonestly blaming others for the consequences of their own conduct would also affect stakeholder value.




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