Frustration Friday: Fraudclosure Focus

We've entered a fascinating new phase of the Great Recession, differing from those stale, dull times where the world economy teetered on the brink of meltdown.  This fresh-faced new phase of the slow-mo Keystone Kop disaster is the "Fraudclosure" one.  Instead of Banks just failing and a solid recession and semi-systematic unemployment, we have something new – all those mortgages bundled up in investments are a wee bit hard to foreclose on because of bad record keeping, fraud, and general incompetence.

Yep, first too many mortgages with questionable terms, and now that everyone wonders where their money has gone, no one is actually sure who to foreclose on legitimately.  Illegitimately of course we're seeing some foreclosures, and that's making news enough to slap people in the face with the fact the bungling bureaucratic banker meltdown isn't done yet.

I could rant about the people behind this mess, about the need for better laws, and of course the need for jail time.  But instead I'd like to rant on the fact some people are ignoring this.

You can't ignore something like this because it is going to affect your career.  This is big.  Just as big as the  . . . last banking disaster.

First, you can't ignore it because this kind of messed-up maelstrom of monetary malfeasance can suck all of us into another recession.  It doesn't matter if you don't have a house and don't work in banking, this is a case of people not knowing who owns what among a lot of questionable investments.  That kind of destroys confidence in the economy and institutions involved in the economy – and if it turns out this lack of confidence is warranted and a lot of mortage-backed investments are total messes and no one knows who owns what, it could be a disaster for the global economy.

Secondly, even if the economy doesn't melt down, if you don't working banking, you may find it affects you negatively.  A bank that melts down doesn't purchase new hardware, doesn't hire ad agencies, doesn't hire IT gurus – in short, doesn't put money into the economy where you may work.  A bank that melts down may also mean your money goes into limbo and you're dealing with the FDIC.

Third, you don't have any direct work with banking, you may find you're doing peripheral work.  A company providing hardware to a bank may be being your company's microchips, a bank may be providing benefits through the insurance company you work for, etc. 

Fourth, if you end up needing loans, refinancing, etc. another bank crisis is going to make it pretty bloody hard on you to put the cash into your stash.  When banks are busy trying to find out if they actually own what they thought they did, they're going to be a might distracted. This also slows down other people launching businesses, of course.

Fifth, if you work in law . . . put on your party hat.  I've already heard the "Fraudclosure" mess called the Lawyer Full Employment Act.  Go get 'em legal eagles.

So pay attention.  This is not abstract and distant and boring, this is the economy and your life.

Also it gave us the cool term "Fraudclosure."  Really, go on and use it . . .

Steven Savage

News Of The Day 10/21/2010

Lots of venture capital flowing, Microsoft may come back and is Sony going Android Crazy? Set course for geek news time!

Career:
Andy Robinson has a short and sweet article on the power of checklists. I use similar techniques and it helps a lot.

Three myths messing up your career.

Economics/Geekonomics/Total Economic Disasternomics:
MUST READ: More Foreclosure Fraud for Dummies! The Big Picture has parts three and four. Read this stuff, people.

Media:
US Today is restructuring. Not sure where this will lead. Some useful insights here on what they're trying.

Mobile:
Nokia restructures. 1,800 laid off – Sounds like this is part of restructuring. Still a bit of a warning to those looking at Nokia for employment. I also wonder just how far this is going to go . . .

Science:
MBA Polymers raises $25 million for plastic recycling. Sounds like they've got good processes, good infrastructure, and a good amount of money. Feeling Green? They might be worth your resume – and they sound very solid in their business.

Social Media:
A $250 VC fund for social startups? Damn right. So now let's see who taps into this sweet amount of money.

Technology:
Microsoft might have the foundation for a comeback. Short on details, but this article gives a nice overview that Microsoft may actually be doing decent for itself.

Apparently Sony is big on Android. Interesting – this could be something they use to distinguish themselves in the market and keep some geek-hip elements as well. It also suggests some potential alliance with Google, making this . . . more of the Everything Wars. More reasons to know Android, of course, if you haven't had enough already.

Video Games:
Mark Zuckerberg says Facebook will never make games. They really don't need to, but also may help them build, keep, and reassure their allies.

QUESTION OF THE DAY: How can Sony use Android to improve and expand its prospects?

Steven Savage

Back To The Mac: As Expected

So as Bonnie posted in yesterday's News Of The Day, we've got a few announcements from Apple during their "Back To The Mac" event.  I found none of these surprising – that isn't a bad thing, actually – but I think it bears closer analysis as it gives us ideas of trends we see both in Apple technology, but in other technologies as well.

These, of course, are going to affect us progeeks, so I feel it's worth calling them out.

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