Welcome to Sealand. Now Bugger Off.
Inside the attempt to turn a World War II-era antiaircraft deck (that its owner claims is an independent nation) into “the world’s first truly offshore, almost-anything-goes electronic data haven.”
Inside the attempt to turn a World War II-era antiaircraft deck (that its owner claims is an independent nation) into “the world’s first truly offshore, almost-anything-goes electronic data haven.”
Simson Garfinkel Wired Jul 2000 30min Permalink
On Manoj Bhargava, who says he’s “probably the wealthiest Indian in America,” and his ubiquitous product.
Clare O'Connor Forbes Feb 2012 10min Permalink
The rise and fall of the Internet mogul.
Sean Gallagher Ars Technica Jan 2012 15min Permalink
How the U.S. lost out on iPhone work.
Charles Duhigg, Keith Bradsher New York Times Jan 2012 20min Permalink
A profile of Harold Hamm, oil baron.
Bryan Gruley Businessweek Jan 2012 10min Permalink
The story of Standard Motor Products, a 92-year-old family-run auto parts manufacturer, and the transformation of the U.S. manufacturing industry.
Adam Davidson The Atlantic Jan 2012 30min Permalink
Lessons learned about white-collar crime from an economist turned bagel salesman whose business relied entirely on the honor system.
Stephen J. Dubner New York Times Magazine Jun 2004 15min Permalink
Con man turned pastor turned con man; a profile of a serial scammer and the movie he tried to make about himself.
Roger Parloff Fortune Jan 2011 35min Permalink
On switching to the gold standard and a trip to the Yukon to witness the modern gold rush.
Wells Tower GQ Jan 2012 15min Permalink
TheFacebook, as it was then called, had just reached 1.5 million users:
In the end, Zuckerberg says, quarrels over money rarely come up because money is not their priority. “We’re in a really interesting place because if you look at the assets we have, we’re fucking rich,” Zuckerberg adds. “But if you look at like the cash and the amount of money we have to live with, we’re dirt poor. All the stuff we own is tied up in random assets” like servers and the company itself. “Living like we do now, it’s, like, not that big of a deal for us. We’re not like, Aw man, I wish I had a million dollars now. Because, like, we kind of like living like college students and being dirty. It’s fun."
Kevin J. Feeney The Harvard Crimson Feb 2005 20min Permalink
After decades of failed revitalization strategies, a town of 10,000 tries another.
Jonathan Mahler New York Times Magazine Dec 2011 30min Permalink
How the Mosley Motel, off U.S. 19 in Florida, became the temporary home to at least 27 families turned away from full shelters.
Leonora LaPeter Anton The St. Petersburg Times Nov 2011 10min Permalink
A pub’s-eye view of Ireland’s recent run of leaders.
Gabriel O'Malley n+1 Nov 2011 20min Permalink
Best Article Reprints Business
A breakdown of the early 80s homeless epidemic.
Jonathan Alter Newsweek Jan 1980 15min Permalink
On Michael Lewis and the global financial crisis.
Previously: The Michael Lewis World Tour of Economic Collapse
John Lanchester New York Review of Books Nov 2011 15min Permalink
The Occupy Wall Street origin story.
Mattathias Schwartz New Yorker Nov 2011 25min Permalink
The absurd scale of McDonald’s’ economics suggests a company more like a commodity trader than a chain of restaurants.
At this volume, and with the impermanence of the sandwich, it only makes sense for McDonald’s to treat the sandwich as a sort of arbitrage strategy: at both ends of the product pipeline, you have a good being traded at such large volume that we might as well forget that one end of the pipeline is hogs and corn and the other end is a sandwich. McDonald’s likely doesn’t think in these terms, and neither should you.
Willy Staley The Awl Nov 2011 10min Permalink
On a pair of Israeli psychologists who between 1971 and 1984 “published a series of quirky papers exploring the ways human judgment may be distorted when we are making decisions in conditions of uncertainty.”
Michael Lewis Vanity Fair Dec 2011 Permalink
On the TechCrunch founder’s venture capital fund, and a new breed of startup investor.
As Twitter-loving VC investors have become brand names themselves (Fred Wilson, Marc Andreessen, Chris Sacca), what one might call the auteur theory of venture capitalism has emerged—the idea that startup companies bear the unique creative signature of those who invested in them. To study a venture capitalist’s portfolio is to study his oeuvre.
Felix Gillette Businessweek Nov 2011 10min Permalink
The world’s fastest growing economy isn’t China; it’s the “unheralded alternative economic universe of System D” aka the $10 trillion global black market.
Robert Neuwirth Foreign Policy Oct 2011 10min Permalink
Who simultaneously did business with the U.S. government, the besieged Syrian regime, and the Libyan rebels last month? The group of 16 trading houses that collectively are “worth over a trillion dollars in annual revenue and control more than half the world’s freely traded commodities.”
Joshua Schneyer Reuters Oct 2011 35min Permalink
How Warren Buffett’s public image has aided his success.
As a successful investor, he merely moved markets; but as the charismatic, reassuring, quotable prototype of the honest capitalist (a sort of J. P. Morgan with a moral sense), he's capable of influencing elections, galvanizing rock-concert-size crowds, and in general defining how we Americans feel about the system that underlies our wealth.
Walter Kirn The Atlantic Nov 2004 25min Permalink
“It’s striking that for all the talk about polarization in the US, the Tea Party Movement and Occupy Wall Street are entirely non-violent. Overseas, no one expected the Arab Spring protests to be as nonviolent as they were,” Pinker wrote in an email. The threat of overwhelming reprisal from authorities may have brought some peace to seventeenth- and eighteenth-century England, but Pinker also pointed to research that, today, “nonviolent protest movements achieve their aims far more often than violent ones.” Still, the story of violence’s decline contains much violence, and America is no exception.
Christopher Watt Maisonneuve Oct 2011 15min Permalink
Apple vs. Google vs. Facebook vs. Amazon.
Farhad Manjoo Fast Company Oct 2011 30min Permalink
On 20-somethings in America, or:
My screwed, coddled, self-absorbed, mocked, surprisingly resilient generation.
Noreen Malone New York Oct 2011 20min Permalink