News

Verizon’s Legionella Bugs | Bolt’s Dot-Bomb Echo | Yandex’s Russian CEO Quits

Welcome to The Long View—where we peruse the news of the week and strip it to the essentials. Let’s work out what really matters.

This week: Verizon fined for allegedly spreading disease, Bolt Financial repeats the mistakes of the past, and the founder of Yandex resigns.

1. NY AG vs. VZ: FIGHT!

First up this week: Another summer, another outbreak of Legionnaires’ disease in New York. The state’s Attorney General, Letitia James, has some harsh words to say about the maintenance record of Verizon’s rooftop air chillers.

Analysis: Is your data center killing people?

Poorly maintained aircon condensers or cooling towers can breed bacteria and spray them all over the surrounding area. Don’t forget to maintain yours—as AG James alleges Verizon did. Legionella and other bacteria spread on aerosols can be a serious health hazard to employees, visitors and neighbors—potentially fatal.

Rebecca Heilweil: New York’s attorney general calls out Verizon for spreading Legionnaires’ disease

When you think about potential vectors for disease, Verizon probably isn’t the first thing that comes to mind. But this week, New York Attorney General Letitia James announced the findings of a three-year investigation into cooling towers on buildings throughout the state. It did not look good for Verizon.

The findings … reviewed Verizon’s cooling tower maintenance record starting in 2017 [and] arrive amid two new clusters of Legionnaires’ … including an outbreak in the Bronx that has so far killed two people and infected at least 24. [At] four specific cooling towers in the Bronx’s Highbridge area … the bacteria was found growing. The [NYC] Health Department did not say who was responsible. … The company [said] it has admitted no wrongdoing.

Cooling towers like the ones used by Verizon are often placed on rooftops, and are typically used to cool down … telecommunications equipment. [If infected by] Legionella bacteria, that bacteria can enter the air, too, where it can infect nearby people. These cooling towers are particularly concerning because they can operate at temperatures that are ideal for this bacteria’s growth, especially during the summer.


So far, Verizon has been fined $118,000 for the historic failures. @LucyDunagan explains why this matters:

I’m angry. … $118,000 penalty is nothing. My husband had LD and spent 37 days in ICU, fighting for his life and another 14 days in a respiratory hospital being weaned from an incubator and learning to walk. Permanent lung, heart and kidney damage.

His bill was around half a million. He was never the same and … 2½ years later he died. This isn’t even a slap on the hand … for such a huge company.


But is there more to come? With an important clarification, here’s u/winterspike:

The fine relates to [an] investigation into Verizon that concluded a few weeks ago, and is not related to this latest outbreak. If this latest outbreak is attributable to Verizon, they’ll face much more severe penalties.


2. Bolt Dot-Com Shens: History Rhymes

Bolt Financial is being criticized for hundreds of interest-free loans it gave staff to exercise stock options. Just over three months later, almost a third of the company got laid off.

Analysis: Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it

The loan program has ominous echoes of the dot-com crash of 22 years ago. Back then frothy markets caused similar stock-option shenanigans, leaving countless startup employees with crippling debt or a big tax bill. “When experience is not retained … infancy is perpetual.”

Arielle Pardes: Bolt Loaned Employees Thousands to Buy Stock—Then Laid Them Off

In late May, [over one] day, 250 employees—nearly one-third of the company—had been let go. … But Bolt seemed to be doing fine; the founder bragged that the company was growing “at lightning speed.” An employee had even asked, in a recent town hall, if they should expect layoffs any time soon. The CEO, Maju Kuruvilla, had said no.

[This had] led some of Bolt’s employees to take out personal loans from the company in order to exercise … options. Bolt’s founder, Ryan Breslow … said that over half of Bolt’s employees had chosen to take part in the program, [but] a spokesperson for Bolt said that only a “single-digit” number of employees who were laid off will have to pay back loans.

In the dotcom crash of 2000, plenty of other startup employees found themselves in a similar position. These types of loans left people saddled with debt [or] tax burdens from having loans forgiven.


Yikes. Sounds predatory, right? u/Korrocks isn’t so sure:

I don’t know if it’s necessarily too predatory. It sounds like the employees can be made whole by selling the options back to the company, which in theory leaves them in the position they were in before they took out the loans. They’d only have to repay the loans if they wanted to keep the options or get the stock.

The gray area is whether the employees made career decisions based on the value of the stock (e.g., if they accepted a lower salary than they could have gotten from other companies because they were factoring in the value of the options in their compensation package). Employees who are in that position can legitimately feel ripped off since it they knew that they’d be pressured to sell back the options after … being laid off … then they might have either asked for more money as salary or taken different jobs to begin with.


And we’re led to believe it’s fewer than 10 people. But skrtskrt doesn’t buy that:

A ton more that didn’t get laid off borrowed money to exercise that have likely had their valuation crushed. The fact that the C-suite felt comfortable doing this (even if there were no layoffs) is completely rotten and indicates far more about them and the company than the number of people affected.


3. Yandex Founder Resigns due to EU Sanctions

The billionaire Russian CEO of Yandex, Arkady Yuryevich Volozh, was sanctioned by the EU last week. As a result, he’s “voluntarily” stepped aside at the Russian internet powerhouse.

Analysis: Ukraine war claims another DevOps scalp

Yandex, a once-great internet service-cum-developer, is now widely seen as just another pawn in Vladimir Putin’s deadly game. And Volozh is the visible figurehead the EU needs if it’s to show how serious it is about hurting those close to the regime.

Paul Julius Reuter: Yandex CEO resigns after being targeted by EU sanctions

Russian internet giant Yandex [said] Arkady Volozh had stepped down as CEO and left the board of directors after the European Union included him on its latest list of sanctions against Russian entities and individuals. [He] was put under EU sanctions on Friday after the bloc accused him of “materially or financially” supporting Russia.

Yandex itself is not subject to EU sanctions. The company said it did not believe Volozh’s departure would affect its operations: … “The Board continues to function as normal. Yandex has a strong and deep management team that is well placed to take the company to new levels,” … it said.

Russia … sent tens of thousands of troops into Ukraine on Feb. 24. [It] calls its actions in Ukraine a “special military operation” to disarm and “denazify” its neighbour.


Which causes paroxism in this Anonymous Coward:

Despite Russia’s risible “Nazi” propaganda and the admitted existence of a small number of far-righters in Ukraine—which the Russians have attempted to use to smear the entire country and justify their invasion—it’s quite clear that Russia is the one closest to the historical Nazis in this scenario, right down to the Russian-speaking “Sudetenland” excuse.

Yes, we know the Soviets sacrificed huge numbers of its people and helped the allies to defeat the Axis powers. But they did so because they had to.


Stay in your lane, Richi. Why is the EU targeting Аркадий Юрьевич Волож? golergka knows:

Yandex News service is how a lot of Russians consume news media. It has a systemic history of censorship and propaganda. Also, Yandex search has been known to censor the results as well — always in interests of Russian state.

Once upon a time, in the 00s, Yandex was a great company, with world-class technological community and great ties to Russian mathematical community. … Sadly, this reputation is destroyed now.


The Moral of the Story:
Life … is a tale told by an idiot—full of sound and fury, signifying nothing


You have been reading The Long View by Richi Jennings. You can contact him at @RiCHi or tlv@richi.uk.

Image: Josh Hild (via Unsplash; leveled and cropped)

Richi Jennings

Richi Jennings is a foolish independent industry analyst, editor, and content strategist. A former developer and marketer, he’s also written or edited for Computerworld, Microsoft, Cisco, Micro Focus, HashiCorp, Ferris Research, Osterman Research, Orthogonal Thinking, Native Trust, Elgan Media, Petri, Cyren, Agari, Webroot, HP, HPE, NetApp on Forbes and CIO.com. Bizarrely, his ridiculous work has even won awards from the American Society of Business Publication Editors, ABM/Jesse H. Neal, and B2B Magazine.

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