25 comments

  • hilux 11 hours ago

    It was a Ponzi scheme. Interesting story, but Google turns up much better coverage than this article.

  • bgdkbtv 11 hours ago

    We should have this punishment for politicians and govt scamming people out of billions, too, then. Make it fair on all sides.

  • shiroiushi 11 hours ago

    Hopefully he gets sentenced to the entire 89,000 years. Similar sentences should be the norm for other scammers too.

    • juunpp 11 hours ago

      Let's widen the scope to adtech.

    • edm0nd 11 hours ago

      These types of people are what public hangings should be reserved for imo.

  • tzs 11 hours ago

    That's in Turkey. When they say someone is facing N years in Turkey does it really mean they could be sentenced to that much?

    Or is it like the US where you can be charged with C different crimes that all cover the same physical acts each with a maximum sentence of Y years and that gets report as you are facing C x Y years, even though for sentencing purposes those all count as the same crime so the max you get is Y years no matter how many of the C crimes you are convicted of (as long as it is at least one)?

  • juliangmp 4 hours ago

    What the hell is that website? Literally half the screen is filled with ads and when I scroll down far enough I get to see a different version of the same article?

  • mdotk 10 hours ago

    Very old news. The website seems to be republishing stories

  • 11 hours ago
    [deleted]
  • RecycledEle 10 hours ago

    This is the kind of sentencing we need.

    Every count of fraud needs to carry a separate time in confinement, and those times need to be added.

  • m3kw9 11 hours ago

    Maybe he will get to do all 89,000 years if AGI gets its way and extends life. A very bad time to get 89,000 years of prison time

    • userbinator 10 hours ago

      If AGI gets its way, there will inevitably a bug in the system that makes him only serve 23,464 years.

      • D-Coder 10 hours ago

        And without AGI, there will inevitably (be) a bug in the system that makes him serve only 32,767 years.

    • aussieguy1234 11 hours ago

      Im assuming the life extension treatments, like all medical treatment, will be optional.

      I doubt the state will want to fund those extra years in any case, it costs a lot of money to keep people in prison.

      • m3kw9 10 hours ago

        Laws can be weird, they may be legally required to have a person do the set years. But I think they likely re-sentence based on the new realities. Setting 89000 knowing he’d die in max 100 is different if they can do longer

  • debo_ 11 hours ago

    This title reminds me of the old rude boy song "Judge 400 Years", in which a judge hands out multi-century prison terms. It's a great track: https://youtu.be/bX8USu78E7E

  • soared 11 hours ago

    It is a really cool idea - shame it was a scam. I can’t think of anything else where the virtual world represents the real world in a similar way (or even the inverse). Pokémon go feels similar though.

  • transcriptase 10 hours ago

    89,000 years for a scam.

    Meanwhile in Canada you can have several dozen priors, be out on bail, commit a violent crime and be released on bail again immediately because you pinky promise to behave this time.

    Then have the charges dropped after X months because the courts were too busy handing out probation and bail to other repeat offenders to actually try your case.

    • keepamovin 10 hours ago

      what if we get the bitchun society in the next few years, and eventually everyone can live forever? if they actually sentence him to 1000s of years in prison, and he gets the upgrade, will they keep him in there?