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Topic: A new dimension in the FTX saga: Sam doesn't read books! (Read 159 times)

legendary
Activity: 2282
Merit: 3014
Unfortunately, Sam Bankman-Fried's views about compressing books in blog forms are shared by most youths of this generation. Most of them seem to be on the fast lane to achieve success without investing time in the foundational knowledge of a particular field or endeavor.

Regardless of the claims that learning should be concise and attractive, they cannot dispute the fact that knowledge and experience are not cheap. Yeah, quality and not quantity should be the benchmark of scoring a book but to get a piece of in-depth and comprehensive knowledge about a concept there is a need to gather information from diverse authors of different blogs, books, and other material. There is some vital information that is not available in blogs, you can only access them in books.

The former FTX boss has accepted to appear before the Senate Financial committee but he warned that his testimony wouldn't be helpful. He stated that his comments might not reveal what the lawmakers wanted because they would not be detailed.

You are certainly right in saying "Unfortunately, Sam Bankman-Fried's views about compressing books in blog forms are shared by most youths of this generation".  It's sad how the youth today has changed so much in this sense over time.

It's no surprise to me what so ever that he doesn't read books, or is dumb enough to say something like this.  I've never met a super intelligent person who doesn't read books, and a lot of.  This is just very telling to me.
legendary
Activity: 3542
Merit: 1352
Cashback 15%
SBF and FTX case is the gift that keeps on giving. Imagine being remarkably successful and somehow you don't like reading books. It's a facepalm moment but man, that's on him. Regarding their books in accounting, now that's a big lapse that he's done to put him where he and his company is at right now. I hope the senate issues that subpoena and let the gentleman experience some time behind bars.
hero member
Activity: 2884
Merit: 794
I am terrible at Fantasy Football!!!
Unfortunately, Sam Bankman-Fried's views about compressing books in blog forms are shared by most youths of this generation. Most of them seem to be on the fast lane to achieve success without investing time in the foundational knowledge of a particular field or endeavor.

Regardless of the claims that learning should be concise and attractive, they cannot dispute the fact that knowledge and experience are not cheap. Yeah, quality and not quantity should be the benchmark of scoring a book but to get a piece of in-depth and comprehensive knowledge about a concept there is a need to gather information from diverse authors of different blogs, books, and other material. There is some vital information that is not available in blogs, you can only access them in books.

The former FTX boss has accepted to appear before the Senate Financial committee but he warned that his testimony wouldn't be helpful. He stated that his comments might not reveal what the lawmakers wanted because they would not be detailed.
This is a trend I have noticed as well, the people of today are so used to find anything they want by using Google and only having to click to result at the top of their search that they have forgot that in many cases this is nowhere near enough, now if this attitude applied to books or knowledge in general it would be tragic enough, but now they want to apply this to everything including making money, this reminds me of the episode Go Fund Yourself of South Park in which the boys want to create a company and make a fortune while doing nothing.
legendary
Activity: 2912
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Blackjack.fun
I think this is another one of his attempts to look "cool" and try to sell this image that is really appreciated by adolescents, that you don't need to read books, you don't need to go to school, you don't need to listen to others, just listen to your gut and you might be the one 1 in a million that get lucky and not the rest for which the first book at 30 will be the instruction manual for the fryer at McDonald's.

Besides, coming from him this is BS, no way would have he graduated from MIT without reading a book, and with his parents being teachers no way he made it till 10 without already a hundred read. The more he opens his mouth it becomes clear that he is quite an unstable guy and a pathological liar.
In short, the guy is nuts, everything coming from him is either wrong or a lie.

legendary
Activity: 1568
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bitcoincleanup.com / bitmixlist.org
Unfortunately, Sam Bankman-Fried's views about compressing books in blog forms are shared by most youths of this generation. Most of them seem to be on the fast lane to achieve success without investing time in the foundational knowledge of a particular field or endeavor.

Every entrepreneur should be reading books, in fact. Even more books than the average person would read. It's a major factor in success, to learn from other people's experience (IIRC Bill Gates and Warren Buffett both used to read a ton of books).
legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 2017
Now, I have not lost any money to FTX, but I'm sure a lot of people reading this have, so justice is finally going to be served.

This is not my case either.

Just because SBF hasn't been locked up yet doesn't mean law enforcement isn't building a case against him, which I've no doubt they're doing.

Yesterday I heard in an interview that Enron took three years to prosecute, so I have no doubt that although it may take some time to investigate, he will be judged.

As for him not reading books, I'm somewhere in the middle. Maybe books aren't that necessary anymore, in the same way that it's a crock to learn maps. A lot of rote learning, with the cell phone we all have at hand, is pointless. Technology gives us leverage, and it is better to take advantage of the time by making a symbiosis with technology to be much more productive than to stay anchored in technologies of the past.

This with exceptions obviously, if you want to do a doctoral thesis, you are going to have to read books, but even today sources that 30 years ago would have been unthinkable coming from the internet are admitted in academic articles and theses.
sr. member
Activity: 1372
Merit: 348
Unfortunately, Sam Bankman-Fried's views about compressing books in blog forms are shared by most youths of this generation. Most of them seem to be on the fast lane to achieve success without investing time in the foundational knowledge of a particular field or endeavor.

The thing is that SBF success is staged.  He never work hard for his success but someone worked hard for him by using the social media to make him a sensation.  If he is truly what the earlier said about him being genius kid, he shouldn't have commit the mistakes he did in FTX.


The former FTX boss has accepted to appear before the Senate Financial committee but he warned that his testimony wouldn't be helpful. He stated that his comments might not reveal what the lawmakers wanted because they would not be detailed.

It wouldn't be helpful because he will be there for attendance purpose only and will lie about the truth of what happened in the FTX.  Possibly he will point the mistake on the CEO of ALAMEDA and wish that it is enough to bail himself out.
hero member
Activity: 2114
Merit: 603
That’s not FTX saga, this has become publicity of SBM SAGA. The name is everywhere man, it’s so boring to hear it again and again. I mean what the hell, that dude is now famous because of the negative publicity. Now look at the news media like this bringing up shitty facts about SBM and how he does not read the books and what are his thoughts…..why the hell anyone would want to know about him we already got to know what kind of personality he holds after his mismanagement or may be conspiracies that gave rise to FTX incidence. That’s really shameful.
hero member
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Having the habit of reading books and articles is very good because information and knowledge is gotten most time through reading,that is why in schools there must be text books and handouts for students to read in other to be ahead of the teacher or for self learning.

If SBF doesn't read then I guess he was missing so much that would have enable him safe the crash of FTX. I could remember as a newbie when I first came into this forum, I don't like reading long threads but as time goes and all the advice given to newbies about how to grow in the forum in knowledge and in rank is by reading more and post less.

The moment I realized this and applied the method,understanding about topics discussed in the forum became easier. If you don't read to have more knowledge about your investment, your investment will crash. He is too young to handle FTX,the business was bigger than his brain that was why he used FTX as a link to big banks and government forgetting the purpose of the exchange which is to keep customers funds safe in other to be successful.

legendary
Activity: 3500
Merit: 6981
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Me neither; but I will say "justice is finally going to be served" only after he really gets what he deserves. The frail steps forward are not that convincing yet.
Just because SBF hasn't been locked up yet doesn't mean law enforcement isn't building a case against him, which I've no doubt they're doing.  That takes time, and I'm assuming whatever alphabet agencies are investigating him are going to use all of these recent interviews against him when the time comes.  I don't remember how long it took for the Enron execs to go to prison, but Skilling and Fastow were free for a while after the collapse, and Ken Lay died before he was brought to justice.

Be patient, and hopefully SBF will see the inside of a prison cell.  There's certainly enough evidence against him, but you never know what kind of deals can be struck with lawyers behind the scenes.  The justice system is totally fucked.
legendary
Activity: 4410
Merit: 4766
someone that doesnt read books or walls of text, never does good research. they instead cheat using google or paying someone for an answer to get their degree or "education" into any skill

as for the senate threat.
the senate want to get SBF to come to america(handcuff opportunity). where as he can simply 'remote-attend' via a skype/zoom call

as for questions about how funds were moved. enough info has been revealed already

funds were co mingled into a single wallet. staff and partners had wallet access because all they needed was a thumbs up cell phone text from SBF to do any transfers

even the in exchange balance of customers was treated that his partner businesses were 'customers' of the exchange. and wallet key access player of the reserves on the blockchain(s). so manipulating both internal balance and also real coin holdings was childsplay

its not just fraud of customer funds,
its not just breach of contract of customer user agreement/contract
its also insider-trading, laundering, false accounting, tax evasion, the list goes on

SBF definitely would have had legal advice to not physically enter the US. and its why his parents moved out of the US in the last month
sr. member
Activity: 1736
Merit: 306
Who cares if he reads or not the media and journalist will always look for means to make additional funds from every happening.

First of all he broke all the security laws by not even ensuring that his customers fund's are safe with him, instead he served as a link to big banks and governments. I honestly wished he gets what he deserves and doesn't escapes from this experience.

The crash of his exchange has seen both winner's and lossers, he is to appear before the US congress for questioning. He should have allowed the withdrawal of those coins but they all got them locked intentionally.
legendary
Activity: 3668
Merit: 6382
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Unfortunately, Sam Bankman-Fried's views about compressing books in blog forms are shared by most youths of this generation. Most of them seem to be on the fast lane to achieve success without investing time in the foundational knowledge of a particular field or endeavor.

The information in books is usually diluted and one may see that reading is wasted time. It's a mistake often done in the current "era" of everything done in a haste.
But if one doesn't read the books... most often will miss some subtle information the book would be holding and, since he doesn't know about that, won't be able to find "the blog post" explaining it.

So blogs are great in retrieving information... after the books were read.

Now, I have not lost any money to FTX, but I'm sure a lot of people reading this have, so justice is finally going to be served.

Me neither; but I will say "justice is finally going to be served" only after he really gets what he deserves. The frail steps forward are not that convincing yet.
legendary
Activity: 3500
Merit: 6981
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Unfortunately, Sam Bankman-Fried's views about compressing books in blog forms are shared by most youths of this generation. Most of them seem to be on the fast lane to achieve success without investing time in the foundational knowledge of a particular field or endeavor.
Oh man, don't get me started....I see some of these young Youtubers who seemingly have a very low-level vocabulary and can't pronounce words that anyone in their 20s who graduated high school should.

They all seem to repeat the same buzz phrases, like:

Virtue signaling
Rug Pull
Narrative
Nothing burger
Copium
Unhinged
Cringe (as a noun)
Self-insert
Clout-chasing
Punching down
Gigachad

...and others, as if they get all of their education from other Youtubers.

Frankly I don't care if SBF doesn't read books, and I don't see the relevance to this other than to further destroy his image (note: I'm not defending him, just criticizing the media a bit).  He did graduate from MIT, right?  The guy is no idiot even if he acts and speaks like one, and he clearly does both based on interviews I've seen.  I've been wondering how he got himself to where he was, atop one of the largest exchanges in the world.  The conclusion I've come to is that he had to have had some business or political connections--perhaps through his parents--in order to achieve what he did.

But man, once he started running FTX he made some seriously amateurish, foolish, and downright irresponsible decisions with his customers' money.  All of these interviews he's doing now are just putting giant nails in his coffin.  That in itself baffles me, because you'd think he'd realize that.
full member
Activity: 1736
Merit: 121
He is surely on the speed lane of life if he is not patient to read book and to sum it up in just few posts in blog. There are secrets to life that is hid in the books, the experience of people to riches and to the mistakes of people to poverty. Rich dad and poor dad by Robert kiyasaki is one inspiration of books that can make some change the focus his life and take a turn. I don't see the reason he condemn reading if not advising youth to go in fast lane for wealth and that they are doing like him to scam innocent people.
hero member
Activity: 686
Merit: 987
Give all before death
Unfortunately, Sam Bankman-Fried's views about compressing books in blog forms are shared by most youths of this generation. Most of them seem to be on the fast lane to achieve success without investing time in the foundational knowledge of a particular field or endeavor.

Regardless of the claims that learning should be concise and attractive, they cannot dispute the fact that knowledge and experience are not cheap. Yeah, quality and not quantity should be the benchmark of scoring a book but to get a piece of in-depth and comprehensive knowledge about a concept there is a need to gather information from diverse authors of different blogs, books, and other material. There is some vital information that is not available in blogs, you can only access them in books.

The former FTX boss has accepted to appear before the Senate Financial committee but he warned that his testimony wouldn't be helpful. He stated that his comments might not reveal what the lawmakers wanted because they would not be detailed.
legendary
Activity: 1568
Merit: 6660
bitcoincleanup.com / bitmixlist.org
This is from the Washington Post editorial which you can view here. In it, he tells a journalist that he doesn't see why a book can't be contained in a "six-paragraph blog post" while explaining why he doesn't read books.

And unfortunately the same also goes for his accounting which leads to Henry Ford-esque moments of "throwing the accounting books onto the street and putting all the money in a large barrel to pay expenses" (yes Ford actually did that, look it up).

Amid all the bombshell revelations about fallen crypto king Sam Bankman-Fried, a seemingly trivial bit of information might tell us everything we need to know: He doesn’t read books.

If you’re anticipating a caveat or qualifier, you’re as out of luck as the FTX investors whose money SBF allegedly lost. “I’m addicted to reading,” a journalist said to the erstwhile multibillionaire in a recently resurfaced interview. “Oh, yeah?” SBF replied. “I would never read a book.”
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Now, there are plenty of people who don’t read. This does not indicate that they are likely to end up accused of having robbed thousands of others of their fortunes in a speculative adventure that is part financial experiment, part Ponzi scheme. Some prefer to listen; some prefer to do something else altogether. The thing is, the reason counts.

Behold, then, SBF’s reason: “I don’t want to say no book is ever worth reading, but I actually do believe something pretty close to that. … If you wrote a book, you f---ed up, and it should have been a six-paragraph blog post.”

Now, this is paragraph five of this column, so we’re running short on worthwhile words. But this means-to-an-end worldview might be the key to understanding SBF’s character, and his career. The point for SBF, it seems, isn’t the book itself but what he takes away from it — the instrumental knowledge that, presumably, he can gather more efficiently from a SparkNotes version of any opus than from the work itself.

Part of the problem might be an unspoken focus on nonfiction versus fiction, and maybe highly technical nonfiction in particular. After all, it’s easier to argue that you can learn everything you really need to know about the history of securities regulation from a cleverly constructed issue brief than it is to insist that if someone tells you Elizabeth Bennet ends up marrying Mr. Darcy, you’ve absorbed the sum total of “Pride and Prejudice.”

But no matter the type of book he’s talking about, what SBF is missing is the experience. You’re supposed to read not in spite of the digressions and diversions that stand between you and the denouement, but because of them; the little things aren’t extraneous but essential. And what you come out of a book with isn’t always supposed to be instrumental at all, at least not in any practical sense. You read to read; you don’t read to have read.

Which brings us back to SBF and FTX — the bookkeeping that, according to the company’s bankruptcy lawyer, was less sloppy than nonexistent; the big bets that executives figured were only a liability if they lost; the lending of investors’ funds to prop up a trading firm SBF also owned. You could argue these things are immoral in their own right. Yet to SBF, they would only count as wrong if the ultimate outcome of them was likely to be wrong, too. What happened along the way, just like with those books not worth reading, didn’t appear to carry much water.

All this stemmed not simply from an inclination toward reckless management, but from something more deeply rooted: philosophy. SBF is a believer in effective altruism. This school of thought seeks to, by its own definition, use “evidence and reason to figure out how to benefit others as much as possible.” More specifically, SBF had devoted his life toward “earning to give.” You pick a career not because you care about the career itself, or even think it’s good for the world on its own merits. You pick a career because it will make you a massive amount of money, and you can spend that money on something that is good. So SBF picked finance, and after that he picked crypto.

Earning to give, in other words, is at its most extreme all about the end, means be damned.
The trouble is, if you don’t care about what you do, if part of you disdains what you do, your only concern is what the work gets you. That’s the case whether your aim is to keep all the riches for yourself or to do precisely the opposite. SBF was also immersed in a type of effective altruism known as longtermism, where that ultimate outcome you’re seeking is hundreds of thousands or even millions of years away, so instead of buying bed nets for children dying of malaria today, you’re trying to prevent the hypothetical next pandemic or the overheating of the earth. The risk, of course, is that this obsession with the future further disconnects you from the present. Why not scam a few bucks today to save a few billion lives in the 23rd century? That’s not just skipping to the end of the book — it’s skipping to the end of the entire series.

The effective altruism movement was already grappling with the question of whether it had become too tied up in ethical bean-counting. Now that one of its preeminent acolytes has plummeted from grace, those efforts are even more urgent. People can, as many in the movement already recognize, do the right thing today and the right thing tomorrow at the same time. They can pursue just ends without forgetting to pay attention to the means that take them there. Figuring it out, however, might require reading a book or two.

In other news, the Senate is threatening to subpoena him if he doesn't testify voluntarily about FTX (finally!).

Now, I have not lost any money to FTX, but I'm sure a lot of people reading this have, so justice is finally going to be served.
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