Travis Kalanick, the chief executive of Uber, visited Apple's headquarters in early 2015 to meet with Timothy D. Cook, who runs the iPhone maker. It was a session that Mr. Kalanick was dreading.
For months, Mr. Kalanick had pulled a fast one on Apple by directing his employees to help camouflage the ride-hailing app from Apple's engineers. The reason? So Apple would not find out that Uber had been secretly identifying and tagging iPhones even after its app had been deleted and the devices erased — a fraud detection maneuver that violated Apple's privacy guidelines.
[...] "So, I've heard you've been breaking some of our rules," Mr. Cook said in his calm, Southern tone. Stop the trickery, Mr. Cook then demanded, or Uber's app would be kicked out of Apple's App Store.
There is brazen, and then there is dumb.
If NYTimes is paywalled, try this, Business Insider
(Score: 3, Insightful) by art guerrilla on Wednesday April 26 2017, @11:57AM
when 'we' as a society value profit uber alles, then what will be the end result ? ? ?
99% of the people are worthless, and zillionaires are the best and most deserving on the planet...
um, given the premise of profit uber alles, *what* other possible outcome can you expect ? ? ?