Wells Fargo admits that its employees opened more than 2,000,000 fake accounts in order to run up fraudulent charges against its customers (employees who balked at committing fraud were fired and blacklisted for life from the banking industry); it also says that the customers it stole from can't sue the company because fake account paperwork bearing their forged signatures includes a promise to enter into binding arbitration rather than suing. (more…)
Wednesday, 1 March 2017
Popular Posts
-
Looking for something to illustrate a post about crunch-time in game development, I ran into this video depicting many forms of footwear (...
-
There are three Egyptian hieroglyphs depicting penises, each with Unicode characters: 𓂸𓂹 𓂺 Amazingly, no-one seems to know about them des...
-
You might not know this, but the editors of Wikipedia maintain an automated list of all the world's cookies. The have everything from ...
-
While every incident that causes damage to an airplane is different, especially ones where passengers, crew, or third parties are injured o...
-
The Cube Two X is a 377-square foot pre-fabricated tiny smart home from Singaporean company Nestron. And it absolutely looks like somet...
-
Paul Manafort speaking to the court today, courtroom sketch artist: Art Lien A judge sentenced former Donald Trump presidential campaign ma...
-
TIL: Actor and comedian Ken Jeong is also a licensed physician . He put his career in medicine on hold to become an actor. Mind you, this ...
-
The cost of lomustine, a veteran cancer drug, have skyrocketed after a startup bought the rights to it and hiked prices 1,400 percent. Ac...
-
Can't agree with your partner on a road trip playlist? Let Spotify curate your music based on both of your listening habits . " ...
-
This one squeaked past the list of prohibited personalized license plates . [ via ]
Powered by Blogger.



