Wasn't the idea just to start a wiki databases of corporation names with research on their good and bad deeds in the entry?
IF that was the idea, it doesn't take any real tech skill to start, I don't think. Just go here.
Source?
I have heard (from TED, I bet) that money doesnt buy happiness, but poverty does buy misery.
EDIT: Here is Nancy Etcoff supporting your cause.
Read the following, and make a real answer.
http://www.dailyfinance.com/2014/05/19/corporate-tax-dodgers/
Five of the top 10 companies cited in WalletHub's survey as paying the highest taxes as a percentage of their profits were oil companies. Namely, Exxon Mobil (XOM), Chevron (CVX), Occidental Petroleum (OXY), ConocoPhillips (COP) and Apache (APA). "
and This article concerning Evnrioenmental Impact: http://www.cnet.com/news/digging-for-rare-earths-the-mines-where-iphones-are-born/
As nasty as this is, I just can't get over what a dumbass he was.
> The government monitored Liang’s use of the confidential FDA database with software installed on his work computer on Jan. 6. The software allowed the government to capture screen shots from the computer, the Justice Department said.
Hey, moron: use someone else's computer, come up with a good excuse, and:
> and he checked the database on Viibryd 20 more times
don't do this.
> Though Liang used accounts that bore other people’s names, the government linked him to the accounts through computer IP addresses used to direct trades. At least $1.18 million was transferred from the brokerage accounts to bank accounts belonging to Liang and his wife, the government said.
Or this! Less tracability! Anonymous IP addresses (this isn't even hard) and learn to launder money properly!
Sometimes I wonder how many intelligently-run crimes of this sort we never find out about because the police are busy chasing the braindead.
Former FBI agent Ted Gunderson wrote a book about this topic in 1986
How to Locate Anyone Anywhere: Without Leaving Home