Recent Comments

  • Gregg Thurman on Apple's securities fraud defense: We didn't know - 'If failure to perform, as to announced capabilities/features, was a crime punishable by a successful class action suit, MSFT would have been sued into oblivion back in the 1980s, 1990s and 2000s. New releases never worked as promised, requiring several Service Pack upgrades that MSFT charged the injured party to get. Windows 97 was an absolute failure, requiring the rapid release of Windows 98 (that you had to pay for).'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple's securities fraud defense: We didn't know - '” What else would you call that?” Being wrong. That isn’t the same thing as being deceitful. Tp prove its case the plaintiff is going to have to show that #1 Apple knew it couldn’t deliver and #2 with that knowledge announced and promoted features it knew it couldn’t deliver and #3 Plaintiffs were harmed by such acts. Saying you were harmed is not proof that you were harmed. All of these points must be delineated in the complaint. #1 and #2 are crucial to the Plaintiffs case. If proof of these two points do not exist in the complaint the presiding judge must dismiss. Failing to deliver, in and of itself, is not a crime.'
  • Dan Scropos on Apple's securities fraud defense: We didn't know - '“The lawsuit argues deliberate deception.” Apple promoted and advertised features that were not available. What else would you call that? I’m sure there was some number of consumers that looked at the ad and said, “That’s something worth upgrading over.” Those are the folks I’m referring to. As far as the investor class action suit goes, I can’t see how you can prove you were hurt when the share price eventually went higher. Seems like day traders with sour grapes.'
  • David Wilson on Premarket: Apple is red - 'I’m glad that it provides Apple an opportunity to buy its stock, but this long-term investor feels better when the stock goes up. I don’t have forever, and I want to be up when I get there. A lot. I’m trying to find a reason why going down $8.77 in a single day would make me laugh much. We’ve been stuck down here for a long time, and I’m ready for it to go up. A lot.'
  • Bill Donahue on Apple's securities fraud defense: We didn't know - 'The class action that’s being pursued isn’t by people who bought iPhones. It’s being pursued by shareholders. And it’s on the basis of alleged securities fraud.'
  • Bill Donahue on Apple's securities fraud defense: We didn't know - 'Exactly. By my count, Musk is now something like 12 years late on his first claim that fully self-driving Teslas would be available the next year – which he’s repeated annually.'
  • Bill Donahue on NATO trusts Apple, Pentagon trusts Grok - '“The looser controls on Grok, and Musk’s absolutist stance on free speech, have made it a more attractive choice to the Pentagon” … for use in classified settings. Like that makes any sense at all. In a normal world, those two things would probably be viewed as unacceptable risks in the context of classified settings. Any strategic leader in politics or a military force should look hard at the fact that Elon temporarily cut off the Ukraine military’s access to StarLink to prevent Ukraine from striking Russian forces in Crimea, because he personally did not want it to happen. Who says he won’t do that with Grok at some point?'
  • David Emery on Apple's securities fraud defense: We didn't know - 'There’s a difference between technical failure and deliberate deception. The lawsuit argues deliberate deception. It’s quite a stretch, but usually the goal for class actions is to not go to trial, but to get a settlement (which the law firm gets 1/3 or more). At trial, the plaintiffs might win big, or they might completely lose. There’s no middle ground there.'
  • Steven Philips on Apple's securities fraud defense: We didn't know - 'I think Dan’ argument has “some” merit – for an individual to be upset about their iPhone purchase. – But I don’t think it applies very well to a (large) investor who is expected to do due diligence. (Or really even to small investors.) Screw-ups happen everywhere. Fraud? No. And as pointed out, if they’d held an “investment” in the company instead of “gambling” on an immediate payout they would have made money.'
  • Stephen Gordon on NATO trusts Apple, Pentagon trusts Grok - 'It’s not that they trust it; they simply do not care.'
  • Steven Philips on NATO trusts Apple, Pentagon trusts Grok - 'M.S. PhD! (As the old joke goes.)'
  • John Konopka on Apple's securities fraud defense: We didn't know - 'I find it amazing that there is an attempt at a Class Action lawsuit over this minor point (as Joe points out, if they just held the stock they’d be wealthier), while at the same time Elon Musk can make all sorts of fabulous claims about products supposedly coming in a year or two but which actually never see the light of day.'
  • Bill Fouche on NATO trusts Apple, Pentagon trusts Grok - 'Politico article earlier today reports on Trump’s efforts to strong-arm Pentagon contractor, Anthropic, into removing the safeguards and redlines it installed to prevent DOD from using its AI products (including Claude) to assist in surveilling U.S. Citizens. Trump is in a foamy outrage over this, threatening to nationalize them, etc. https://www.politico.com/news/2026/02/27/trump-orders-all-federal-agencies-to-stop-using-anthropic-00804517'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple is red - 'BTW, this is EXACTLY the kind of AAPL week that can represent a significant payday for a short term Apple trader…and it all starts and ends with leveraging Max Pain. Meanwhile, of course, long term AAPL investors are chortling all the way to the bank….'
  • Joseph Bland on Apple's securities fraud defense: We didn't know - 'I’m going to come down on your side, Dan. This was a major leadership failure, not by failing to deliver, but by PROMISING delivery. That is very, VERY un-Jobs-like…. It smacks, like the ill-advised kissing up to this President, of decision-making that’s not digging nearly deep enough. My only unanswerable question is – is it Tim Cool, the Apple Board, or both…. I sincerely hope it’s just the Board. In which case they should butt out.'
  • Bill Fouche on NATO trusts Apple, Pentagon trusts Grok - 'This piece should tell the subscribers of Apple 3.0 all they need to know about whether the current administration is competent and trustworthy.'
  • Joseph Bland on NATO trusts Apple, Pentagon trusts Grok - 'Truly criminal negligence. And abysmal stupidity. Buckle your safety belts….'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple is red - 'An express elevator trip up at the beginning and an express elevator trip right back down at the end. What a week!'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Yep. Especially on low volume days (volume today was almost HALF of average volume (24.8/47.6ths….).'
  • Steven Philips on NATO trusts Apple, Pentagon trusts Grok - '“Trust” can be bought if you’re just into appearances. Real TRUST is earned. ( The old fashioned way!) Trump’s administration has a whole bunch of insiders profiting from selling “Trust.”'
  • Hap Allen on Apple's touch screen teaser - 'Reaching to touch a desktop or laptop screen seems, as Steve suggested, not appealing. The same thing touching an iPad in one’s lap is a bit different. I wonder if touch may be part of some wearable device, perhaps integrated with Vision Pro or eyeglass gestures.'
  • Greg Lippert on NATO trusts Apple, Pentagon trusts Grok - 'trusting Grok to be safe is like trusting my dogs to not eat that steak. Apple ≠ Grok These are not the same. I guess if you want to see Putin naked, Grok is a perfect choice.'
  • David Emery on Apple's securities fraud defense: We didn't know - 'Class action lawsuits are all about making class action law firms rich. If they actually benefit the class members (more than token payouts), that’s a coincidence!'
  • Gregg Thurman on NATO trusts Apple, Pentagon trusts Grok - 'Politics should never be a criteria for approval.'
  • Greg Lippert on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Apple trying to find Max Pain?'
  • Dan Scropos on Apple's securities fraud defense: We didn't know - 'I appreciate all of the counter arguments. They’re fairly solid, but I think we’re debating different things. Apple promoted then-unreleased software in order to sell phones, which was the supposed ability for Siri to understand personal context and take action across apps. They eventually pulled the ads. They also pulled “Available now” from the Apple website. It was *never* “available now.” That wasn’t true. That wasn’t “passive or inadvertent.” Some number of people that bought phones on what Apple told them would happen were disappointed. The case seems to have merit.'
  • Bill Donahue on Apple's securities fraud defense: We didn't know - 'I agree, David. And I’d add that anyone who’s a real investor in AAPL (meaning has some semblance of understanding of what the company is about and isn’t just trading in and out mindlessly) understands that Apple’s general approach to every product is approach #1 in your description. As an alternative to your narrative, Dan, I think it’s entirely reasonable to think that after going public with their AI vision in spring of 2024, Apple may have actually come up with a new version of Siri based on an internal LLM or other approach that performed as well as the other LLMs that had long been on the market at that point, and simply decided t at “just as good” was another way of saying “just as bad”, and decided it wasn’t good enough for Apple to go to market with. Throughout all this time, Apple AI scientists have been publishing papers on the advancement and performance and discoveries they’ve been making in AI. And a theme through all of it is that general performance of LLMs is not very good, and that the things they were working on internally were comparable. I look at the class action as likely being initiated by people who probably tried to trade the stock on short-term dynamics and lost money, and want someone to blame other than themselves. Aided substantially by class-action ambulance chaser lawyers. And likely they either don’t understand how science and tech development actually works, and that you no matter how much or how hard you push on a rope it doesn’t mean you’ll ever control where the other end of the rope ends up going, or they’re going to try to do their best to blur that inconvenient truth. Fraud is an intentional act with an intention to deceive and swindle someone, not a passive or inadvertent one. And I believe 100% that nobody in Apple’s executive ranks doesn’t understand that R&D doesn’t lead to certain outcomes by certain dates, and nobody among them is winning the argument on whether or not Apple should intentionally defraud or dupe both customers and shareholders on a massive scale.'
  • David Emery on Apple's securities fraud defense: We didn't know - 'What Gregg said! There’s 2 approaches to managing software: (1) It’s done when it’s done, and that means meeting all of the requirements set for it. (2) It’s done when we run out of time/money, and then we ship. That includes all the bugs in the product. Approach (2) has gotten ‘regularized’ as “Agile”, but it’s not how I think software should be done. There are lots of arguments about “You don’t really understand the full set of requirements when you start” which is usually true. Software scheduling is VERY hard, nearly impossible for unprecedented systems (and “privacy preserving Siri’ is certainly ‘unprecedented’.) You take the best estimate, work to that, and adjust as necessary. Now that doesn’t excuse lack of management, and it appears the Siri team had some management problems/focus issues, as well as tackling a particularly hard problem. Early Siri was shipped using Approach 2, and Apple got burned by that.'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple is red - 'The seemingly frenetic nature of AAPL is not surprising. It’s called hysteresis: “The lagging of an effect behind its cause, as when the change in magnetism of a body lags behind changes in the magnetic field.” – The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition Options effectively “bounce” on the Apple Beachball, like on a trampoline. It has ever been thus. That in turn creates hysteresis, or jagged ups and downs in valuations. It used to be that these ups and downs were far more pronounced snd happened over years, but over the last dozen years, AAPL hysteresis has both grown more shallow and lasted over a shorter length of time, now down to months if not weeks.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple's touch screen teaser - '” I suspect that Apple will solve the concern Steve Jobs expressed. How? I have no idea. ” A “touch” capable trackpad?'