| Cisco is probably feeling pretty nervous about this. Some may say "but why does this matter now? It's all in the past." The problem is I think we're going to see many more such cases in the next couple of decades (at least). There are already companies that knowingly help governments spy on their citizens and help them catch dissidents or even kill journalists (think the self-driving cars of the future or cars that have remote controls). History may not repeat itself, but it rhymes. It's important to punish the people responsible in helping totalitarian leaders (even within "democratic" countries). Maybe such a case will prevent say Intel from installing a backdoor in their chips in the future, or giving certain governments their future SGX keys to secure applications. Also, IBM already got off with helping the Nazis. If they would've been punished for helping the Nazi, maybe they would've thought twice about helping with the Apartheid. EDIT: Apparently punishing companies that helped in the Holocaust and the Apartheid isn't popular on HN. |
You expressed your opinion eloquently, and well within the rules of good discourse.
Downvoters, you should reply to this post explaining what you find wrong with it, rather than simply downvoting in silence.