I'm really glad to see that there is at least some type of corporate accountability going on for so many people dying. This probably should have happened sooner.
Quoting from the Code of Hammurabi (Ancient Babylon):
> If a builder builds a house for someone, and does not construct it properly, and the house which he built falls in and kills its owner, then that builder shall be put to death.
There's real accountability for you. Corporate accountability these days is a sick joke.
Specially since the actual people that was ultimately responsible for the things that happened is the Board of Directors.
Everybody here in Hacker News who has had some relation with a company board knows that the real decisions are done at the board level. The board is the one that ultimately decides the strategy to follow, whether to be pure profit seeking, quality seeking, etc.
The CEO can bring his humanity-responsible strategy to the quarterly meetings, but if the board does not agree, he is SOL. If this happens a lot with "cofounder CEOs" who have big chunks of company ownership, of course it also happens with a hired CEO, who has extremely little leverage with the board.
The Code of Hammurabi also had different punishments for the same crime depending on the wealth/social status of the victim. Some things don't really change.
Corporate accountability would mean finding the people who value profit above quality and removing them from positions of power. I doubt the engineer with a 34 year career at Boeing falls into that camp. He's a fall guy for the board who put him into an impossible position.
The problems with Boeing are systemic problems with the way corporations work and the economy is structured.
> If a builder builds a house for someone, and does not construct it properly, and the house which he built falls in and kills its owner, then that builder shall be put to death.
There's real accountability for you. Corporate accountability these days is a sick joke.