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Tristan O'Tierney, Square Co-Founder, Dies at Age 35 (sfchronicle.com)

An anonymous reader quotes the San Francisco Chronicle: Tristan O'Tierney, a co-founder of San Francisco payments company Square, died Feb. 23 in Ocala, Fla., of causes related to addiction, his family said. He was 35...

His family is awaiting an official cause of death from officials. "I do know that it was in relation to his addiction," [his mother] Pamela Tierney said. "I know he got to the hospital, he couldn't breathe and they couldn't revive him." O'Tierney was in a three-month rehabilitation program in Ocala and had been battling addiction for three years, Tierney said. O'Tierney openly discussed his struggles with addiction on social media. "As some of you may know, I've been battling with addiction for these past few years," he wrote in September in a now-deleted Instagram post that he also shared on Twitter. "With some success. A lot of failure too though."

Bloomberg remembers him as a former engineer at Yahoo and Apple who was hired to develop Square's original mobile payment app in 2009, then stayed on until 2013.

"In addition to his parents, O'Tierney is survived by his three-old-year daughter, according to an obituary on the website for the funeral home."

14 of 160 comments (clear)

  1. Twinkle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I have been following Tristan ever since I used his twitter client on the original iPhone, Twinkle, which brightened my days as an early adopter. Itâ(TM)s interesting to me how much emphasis is put on his addiction and time at Square, whereas his time at Apple and as an early iPhone / iOS developer really was the affectionate and incredible context that struck me as profound. The innovation from those early days is still unparalleled and Twitter is no longer even remotely the same place we met at eleven years ago. RIP Tristan. You were one of the good ones.

  2. Addiction to what? by Hognoxious · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Summary mentions addiction several times, but doesn't say what to. Was he that famous that we're expected to just know?

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    1. Re:Addiction to what? by SuperKendall · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I was wondering the same thing, he's not much of a cautionary tale if we have no idea what to beware of...

      Cigarettes? Pachinko parlors? Mainlining sea-urchins?

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    2. Re:Addiction to what? by slashdice · · Score: 2

      Might as well face it - he was addicted to love.

      --
      Copyright (c) 1990 - 2014 Dice. All rights reserved. Use of this comment is subject to certain Terms and Conditions.
    3. Re:Addiction to what? by Hognoxious · · Score: 2

      Anything fatal causes you to stop breathing.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  3. O'Tierney's Cage by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 3, Informative

    It might be useful to understand why and how O'Tierney felt disconnected.

    background for those who learned from egg-brain propaganda:

    https://youtu.be/ao8L-0nSYzg

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  4. Re:3 months by alvinrod · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Seems like rehab isn’t doing a very good job. You can clean a person up and prevent them from using, but unless you address the underlying issues that lead to them seeking out the drugs in the first place they’ll eventually wind back up in the same place. Drug use and addiction can be as much of a symptom as it is a disease.

    I think that’s why we need to end the war on drugs and decriminalize their use. We spend too much energy focusing on the wrong solution and wonder why nothing seems to change.

  5. Re:Square? by Mr.+Dollar+Ton · · Score: 2

    Japanese: Square KK https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
    American: Square Inc. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/....

  6. Re:3 months by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seems like rehab isnâ(TM)t doing a very good job. You can clean a person up and prevent them from using, but unless you address the underlying issues that lead to them seeking out the drugs in the first place theyâ(TM)ll eventually wind back up in the same place. Drug use and addiction can be as much of a symptom as it is a disease.

    Very true words, and personally I would question even the possibility of a 3-month only program in the first place.

    Everyone has their own story and situation, and even as a person who has gone through that myself, I still have few if any generalizations to make that would be helpful.
    But one rare one is as you say, you absolutely positively NEED that drive and desire to quit, no matter what the cause.

    I've often been told my case is "special" even though I still don't know why.
    My story isn't unique, years of medical procedures and pain management, suddenly combined with unemployment and loss of access to those resources, followed by turning to street drug forms to substitute for that sudden lack of any pain management at all.

    This was nearly two decades ago now, but for a couple years I was fine with the situation.
    I tried a couple times to go back to proper methods and doctors, but at that time I felt that wasn't the better option. No desire to quit, and so no success in doing so.

    An especially sad event one day just ended up flipping a switch in my mind, and I was done.
    I honestly wanted everything to change.
    However withdraw pains can certainly make a person crave death, and at times even seek it out.

    There does exist ways to deal with that one problem, specifically with opiates there are substitutions that trick the withdraw pains away and let you ween away completely.
    The simple and sad truth is, in the US, such treatments can be difficult to get, are very expensive, and of course as I said only address that one aspect about quitting.

    I can only conclude my case was seen as "special" because literally the withdraw agony was the one and only thing keeping me from both quitting and not killing myself.

    Even then, it took almost a year and a half of treatment to ween all the way down to being just miserable, instead of in suicidal agony.
    Three months just doesn't even register as a possibility to me.

    Finding a doctor to provide such treatment was difficult, and it was nearly five hundred bucks a month out of pocket for that year and a half.
    Someone like the co-founder of Square isn't going to have the same worry over money problems, but the vast majority of us almost literally can't afford to get such treatment.

    If such programs were more available, accessible, and not demonized, I can't help but wonder what percentage of people who currently just die would still be alive.
    Worse is the sheer number of people in the world that don't want that number to be above 0%

    Personally I feel each and every last person that claims death is deserved is more than just partially responsible for those millions of lives lost.
    Those holding such a "tough on drugs" opinion are far closer to murderers than any kind of moral pillar, even while they convince themselves they had no part to play and it is the fault of everyone else.

  7. Re:Address the underlying problem by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

    The has been at the core of AA for years

    AA is all about lifetime addiction. Shift you off of booze and onto coffee, donuts, and jesus. Admit that you are powerless? Fuck that. Make people powerful, not weak. And guess what? AA has about the same success rate as trying to quit on your own.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  8. The CDC knows: synthetic opioids by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 4, Informative

    U.S. drug overdose deaths continue to rise; increase fueled by synthetic opioids

    CDC’s analysis, based on 2015-2016 data from 31 states and Washington, D.C., showed:

        * Across demographic categories, the largest increase in opioid overdose death rates was in males between the ages of 25-44.
        * Overall drug overdose death rates increased by 21.5 percent.
                ** The overdose death rate from synthetic opioids (other than methadone) more than doubled, likely driven by illicitly manufactured fentanyl (IMF).
                ** The prescription opioid-related overdose death rate increased by 10.6 percent.
                ** The heroin-related overdose death rate increased by 19.5 percent.
                ** The cocaine-related overdose death rate increased by 52.4 percent.
                ** The psychostimulant-related overdose death rate increased by 33.3 percent.

    ...
        * Fourteen states had significant increases in death rates involving psychostimulants; the highest death rates occurred primarily in the Midwest and Western regions.

    --
    Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
  9. Covered by SuperKendall · · Score: 2

    What addiction would be related to breathing suppression

    Hey man, I did say sea-urchins.

    Also have you HEARD a heavy smoker trying to breathe?

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  10. They (kurzgesagt) retracted it by aepervius · · Score: 4, Informative

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    Basically the video does not live up to their standard, takes only one source, is disputed etc...etc... Frankly "addiction as a sole psychological explanation" is kookery of the highest grade, and match scientology stuff.

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
  11. Anecdotes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Across from my house there is a private drug rehab center. The owner is a former addict himself, inherited some money, and started this as a way to plow back into the community. He claims his center has a roughly 50% success rate versus state-run centers' 10% (lot of variables, this is just supposed to be a ball-park indication). State=non-USA.

    A friend's son is a heroin addict and has been in and out of rehab for years (including the above). The stuff basically alters brain structures so that the addict craves this as much as oxygen, no exaggeration. He realizes that the best chance he would have is to be locked up until sufficiently dried out - which is prohibited by law even under consent. I've known the kid since birth (he is now late 20's) and the story is basically one big heartbreak on all sides.

    The takeaway message I got is Don't Start. If you're just getting high for recreational reasons, then I believe you're incredibly stupid. If you're using to cope with your particular life circumstances, you're not making them better - you're in fact creating even more trouble for yourself that will make it even harder to cope with (by a lot). Addicted in the womb? That really sucks. Still, others have overcome even that. Don't find justifications and excuses, come out of the victim mentality and seek solutions until you find one.