When it comes to dealing with a Florida college student who uses public data and social media to track the private jets of billionaires, politicians and other celebrities, Taylor Swift apparently can’t just shake it off.
In late December, Swift’s camp hit Jack Sweeney, a junior studying information technology at the University of Central Florida, with a cease-and-desist letter that blamed his automated tracking of her private jet for tipping off stalkers as to her location. In the letter, attorneys from the law firm Venable accused Sweeney of effectively providing “individuals intent on harming her, or with nefarious or violent intentions, a roadmap to carry out their plans.”
Sweeney provided the link to that letter in an email to the Associated Press. In that message, he emphasized that while he has never intended to cause harm, he also believes strongly in the importance of transparency and public information.
“One should reasonably expect that their jet will be tracked, whether or not I’m the one doing it, as it is public information after all,” he wrote.
A spokesperson for Swift echoed the legal complaint, saying that “the timing of stalkers” suggests a connection to Sweeney’s flight-tracking sites. The spokesperson did not respond to questions seeking elaboration of that charge, such as whether stalkers have been seen waiting for Swift at the airport when her plane arrived or, alternatively, if there is evidence that stalkers have somehow inferred Swift’s subsequent location from the arrival time of her flight.
The legal letter likewise accuses Sweeney of “disregarding the personal safety of others”; “willful and repeated harassment of our client”; and “intentional, offensive, and outrageous conduct and consistent violations of our client’s privacy.”
Such statements are difficult to square with the fact that Sweeney’s automated tracking accounts merely repackage public data provided by the Federal Aviation Administration, a government agency. That fact did not dissuade the Venable attorneys, who demanded that Sweeney “immediately stop providing information about our client’s location to the public.”
OK is making it easy a threat worth doing something about, or simply making public info easier to find? You're trying to have it both ways. Is it "just easier" or a real threat?
You don't walk in her shoes. You don't know what is or should be important to her. She may be wealthy, but maybe her personal value is something other than what you think it should be.
I don't walk in her shoes. Yeah duh, if I did I wouldn't be, because if I ever made 5 million I'd retire, buy a house, and live off interest comfortably the rest of my life.
I don't need any more than that (and technically don't even need that, considering I don't have it now and I'm not dead).
That's you, not her. Like most successful people I suspect she has higher aspirations. Although I find her music a bit jingleistic, I suspect making it is important to her, perhaps even more than her bank account.
But making music doesn't require her to charge so much money to make more money, only to break even.
In my opinion Higher aspiration doesn't absolve someone of taking advantage of others, even if it is "fair price" according to capitalism.
Sure it could be important to her. In my opinion that changes her desires from "wanting to make music" to "wanting to make more money".
I have yet to understand how it is "moral" for someone in a society to gather such disparate worth, and then call them "successful".
Is society success defined by how much you take advantage of others?
Wealth is a funny thing. Especially these days with so much money at the top. I don't begrudge someone being wealthy. I begrudge those that make money on their money and call it work.
I can begrudge the wealthy. Look at where Taylor Swift came from. She's the child of two wealthy investment bankers who moved to Nashville to support their daughters music career when she was still a tween. Taylor Swift has always been a marketing project, it's all she literally knows how to be since she was a literal child.
Billionaires also don't just have "I can live on this comfortably for the rest of my life" money they have "I can impact the world if I want to" money. If she never played another concert ever again she could travel the world and eat out at the world's most expensive restaurants and clothe herself in the most over expensive folies for the rest of her days and still leave a massive fortune to her children. Cupidity has no upper limit though so she's still focused on accruing money by changing the playing field to her advantage.