New article by Michael Lewis (author of Moneyball, Liars Poker, and The Big Short).
http://www.vanityfair.com/business/2013/09/michael-lewis-goldman-sachs-programmer
September 2013
Michael Lewis: Did Goldman Sachs Overstep in Criminally Charging Its Ex-Programmer?
A month after ace programmer Sergey Aleynikov left Goldman Sachs, he was arrested. Exactly what heâd done neither the F.B.I., which interrogated him, nor the jury, which convicted him a year later, seemed to understand. But Goldman had accused him of stealing computer code, and the 41-year-old father of three was sentenced to eight years in federal prison. Investigating Aleynikovâs case, Michael Lewis holds a second trial.
...
âEven if he had taken Goldmanâs whole platform, it would have been faster and better for him to write the new platform himself,â said one juror.
Several times he surprised them with his answers. They were all shocked, for instance, that from the day he arrived at Goldman he had been able to send Goldmanâs source code to himself weekly without anyone at Goldman saying a word to him about it. âAt Citadel if you install a USB drive into your workstation, someone is standing next to you within five minutes, asking you what the hell you are doing,â said one. Most were surprised by how little he had taken in relation to the whole: eight megabytes in a platform that consisted of an estimated one gigabyte of code. The most cynical among them were surprised mostly by what he had not taken.
âDid you take the strats?â asked one (meaning Goldmanâs trading strategies).
âNo,â said Serge. That was one thing the prosecutors hadnât accused him of.
âBut thatâs the secret sauce, if there is one,â said the juror. âIf youâre going to take something, take the strats.â
âI wasnât interested in the strats,â said Serge.
âBut thatâs like stealing the jewelry box without the jewels,â said another juror.
âYou had super-user status!â said the first. âYou could easily have taken the strats. Why didnât you?â
âTo me, the technology really is not interesting,â said Serge.
âYou werenât interested in how they made hundreds of millions of dollars?â asked someone else.
âNot really,â said Serge. âItâs all one big gamble, one way or another.â
All for 32MB of code and what he wanted it for was the open-source (his assertion)...the 32MB was actually 8MB he sent to himself on four separate occasions.
http://www.vanityfair.com/business/2013/09/michael-lewis-goldman-sachs-programmer
September 2013
Michael Lewis: Did Goldman Sachs Overstep in Criminally Charging Its Ex-Programmer?
A month after ace programmer Sergey Aleynikov left Goldman Sachs, he was arrested. Exactly what heâd done neither the F.B.I., which interrogated him, nor the jury, which convicted him a year later, seemed to understand. But Goldman had accused him of stealing computer code, and the 41-year-old father of three was sentenced to eight years in federal prison. Investigating Aleynikovâs case, Michael Lewis holds a second trial.
...
âEven if he had taken Goldmanâs whole platform, it would have been faster and better for him to write the new platform himself,â said one juror.
Several times he surprised them with his answers. They were all shocked, for instance, that from the day he arrived at Goldman he had been able to send Goldmanâs source code to himself weekly without anyone at Goldman saying a word to him about it. âAt Citadel if you install a USB drive into your workstation, someone is standing next to you within five minutes, asking you what the hell you are doing,â said one. Most were surprised by how little he had taken in relation to the whole: eight megabytes in a platform that consisted of an estimated one gigabyte of code. The most cynical among them were surprised mostly by what he had not taken.
âDid you take the strats?â asked one (meaning Goldmanâs trading strategies).
âNo,â said Serge. That was one thing the prosecutors hadnât accused him of.
âBut thatâs the secret sauce, if there is one,â said the juror. âIf youâre going to take something, take the strats.â
âI wasnât interested in the strats,â said Serge.
âBut thatâs like stealing the jewelry box without the jewels,â said another juror.
âYou had super-user status!â said the first. âYou could easily have taken the strats. Why didnât you?â
âTo me, the technology really is not interesting,â said Serge.
âYou werenât interested in how they made hundreds of millions of dollars?â asked someone else.
âNot really,â said Serge. âItâs all one big gamble, one way or another.â
All for 32MB of code and what he wanted it for was the open-source (his assertion)...the 32MB was actually 8MB he sent to himself on four separate occasions.