I’ve written here about how I recently left a wallet with all my credit cards and $300 in cash in an Istanbul Starbucks, and how the finder tracked me down and returned it intact. I had a similar experience in Turkey several years before. Good thing I didn’t do that in Silicon Valley, where Apple engineer Gray Powell left a priceless prototype of Apple’s next edition of the iPhone in a Redwood City bar. Brian Hogan, a 21-year-old college student, found the phone and shopped it around, finally selling it to technology blog Gizmodo for $5,000.
Hogan’s roommate, Katherine Martinson, said she and other friends tried to talk Hogan out of selling the phone, arguing it would ruin the career of the Apple engineer who lost it. Hogan responded,
“Sucks for him. He lost his phone. Shouldn’t have lost his phone.”
He sure shouldn’t have lost it where Brian Hogan could find it, steal it, and sell it. He should have lost it in Istanbul where it would have been quickly returned to him.
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Tags: Apple, Brian Hogan, ethics, Gizmodo, Gray Powell, iPhone, Istanbul, Katherine Martinson, lost wallet, Redwood City, Silicon Valley, Starbucks, Turkey
May 19, 2010 at 6:12 am |
If someone found it in Turkey, he would also make the effort of walking to the corner shop and load some credits into it. Amazing.
May 19, 2010 at 10:20 am |
Yes. And then drive across the city to return it personally. Then refuse any offer of a reward. Then invite you to have a glass of tea.