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Bill Gates Fined $800,000 Over Stock Purchases

Bronz writes "CNN Money is reporting that Bill Gates has been fined $800,000 for violating antitrust waiting period for stock purchases. The department alleged that Gates bought more than $50 million worth of stock in ICOS Corp. through his personal investment trust and failed to notify antitrust officials about the purchase, as required." It's also clarified: "The technical incident has nothing to do with the government's massive antitrust battles with Microsoft."

12 of 449 comments (clear)

  1. So what? by Lord+Kano · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's not like doesn't have the money. Fining him 800k is like fining me 5$.

    LK

    --
    "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
  2. Talk about a slap on the wrist! by DaHat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    $50 mil stock buy and a 800k fine... lets do the math

    800,000 / 50,000,000 = 1.6%

    A 1.6% fine? That seems low when so many dollars are involved.

  3. Who cares? by joeware · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is not tech news. This is personal news about Bill Gates with nothing to do with Microsoft. Other than to laugh at and make fun of Bill Gates, who cares about this stupid story. Post better stories or don't post anything at all. Right?!?

  4. Percentage, not flat fine by crackshoe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I like what some counrties do -- for fines, they use a percentage of that persons earnings or total wealth (i forget which) and calculate the fine based on that. You don't gouge the poor, and the rich pay a reasonable amount.

    --
    Don't worry - its just stigmata. Pass me a napkin and don't you dare tell my mother.
  5. Bill is above the law. by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As with other violations of anti-trust laws and agreements between MS and the DOJ, Bill and his gang really don't care because the "fine" will always amount to pennies. Billy knows that the reality is he is above the law. What needs to happen here is something more substantial like the threat of jail.

    --
    If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
  6. Re:What I'm wondering is... by Stevyn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Not his sort of thing?

    Making money is is sort of thing. I hope you didn't think software was his sort of thing. Maybe 30 years ago, but I think he's moved on.

  7. Re:MS, Martha and Drugs... by mi · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Oh, sure! Martha Stewart is facing possible jail time, but Bill Gates merely pays a fine! Maybe my wife is right...

    Yeah! I held up a bank and got 12 years, but he drove 20mph over the limit and all he got is a fine?? Mere slap on the wrist! How unfair!

    Bill Gates' "crime" is merely failing to report a perfectly proper transaction on time. Marth Stewart used inside information (not in itself a crime in US) and then conspired to cover it up. She may have been a "woman-champion", which is why your wife may sympathize, but her crime is of much bigger scale, than this one.

    --
    In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
  8. from the drop-in-the-ocean dept. by The+Kow · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So what exactly makes this news-worthy? Is it possible that this sort of thing happens frequently? Judging by the miniscule amount of the fine in comparison to the dollar amount spent, I can't imagine why this is a significant fine (as someone else has posted, a 'disclosure oversight').

    For all the griping we do about the duplicitous nature of certain 'fair and balanced' news outlets (and their ilk), it would seem we'd hold Slashdot to some sort of standard.

    P.S. Yes, I know this has been hashed, rehashed, and then many times again. hash_count++

    --
    Moo
  9. What's the point... by timothy_m_smith · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This was a fine on Gates personal investments, so why is this even /. news worthy? Yes, it is peripherally related to anti-trust matters, but it is still pointless.

    I love all the conspiracy theory that pops up right away how MS is going to be selling drugs and other bs. A common investing strategy is to have a diverse portfolio and this is clearly part of that for Bill.

  10. Re:Too Low by bonch · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So you want to discriminate against wealthier people by making their fines higher than someone less wealthy who committed the same act?

    He just failed to report a transaction on time. But Slashdot will, of course, breathlessly report it as "BILL GATES FINED $800,000 OVER STOCK PURCHASES!!" like a National Enquirer.

  11. turn the horse over by Geoff-with-a-G · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you're going to re-trample this same ground, at least think about it a bit more. It's pathetic that there are so many posts modded up which are one or two lines saying "Gates is really rich, so 800k doesn't mean much to him." and a few more posts saying how we should fine him in proportion to his net worth, so it'll actually discourage him.

    This is idiotic. 90% of the posts don't even refer to what rule he violated, simply to the quantity of the fine. You don't give 10 years in prison for a parking ticket, regardless of how much you dislike the offender. His "crime" here wasn't that he launched some anti-competitive hostile takeover of some open-source small-business, it's that he bought some stock (some, not a controlling interest) and didn't officially notify the government about it. This is a mistake, but not an offense that warrants docking someone a week's pay, regardless of what their salary is.

    Of course, those complaining about the size of the fine aren't at all interested in the law, they're simply happy to see someone they hate getting penalized and wish it was more.

  12. Three words. by karzan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Diminishing marginal utility.

    Basic concept from microeconomic theory: the more you have of something, say for example money, the less each additional unit is worth to you. The marginal utility a person who makes $1 a day gets from a $1 is absolutely massive (life changing experience) compared to the marginal utility a billionare gets (almost nothing).

    Adjusting fines and taxes to higher income is not discrimination, it's recognition of the fact that not every dollar is equal.