Relationship Capital: Drilling down into Davos man. Source: The Economist. The Science of Donor Connections. Source: Stanford Social Innovation. Source: ThinkAdvisor. Source: Reuters. Source: SIIA. The Innovator: A website for the well-connected.
Source: Financial Times. A new networking tool has turned the traditional social media model inside out…. Source: The New York Times. Source: Venture Beat. Source: Press Release. So you want to meet the biggest bigwigs in business?
Neal Goldman found a way…. Neal Goldman discusses big data and the science of decision-making. The big data revolution is requiring a seismic shift inside organizations…. Source: Forbes. When your startup creates a detailed map of profiles and relationships of over 2 million of the rich and powerful in the business world, people will beat a path to your door….
Source: CNBC. RelSci captures it all. Source: Readwrite. One of the big promises of social networking is that it will inject your networking skills with PED performance enhancing data , able….
RelSci can help users build stronger business relationships. Source: Argyle Journal. Ken Langone, Invemed Associates, discusses where retail investors can find the best opportunities…. RelSci connects users to more than two million influential decision-makers.
Source: Mashable. LinkedIn may be useful for helping professionals research and connect with others in their industry, but Relationship Science hopes…. Forget six degrees of Kevin Bacon.
This is six degrees of Henry Kravis. It is, after all, about who you know. Source: Business Insider. He wore the same clothes every day—madras shorts and flip-flops —and always talked about himself.
He told her that he had attended school in Vermont on a scholarship, and showed her a picture of the sizable beachfront property on Martha's Vineyard he claimed to have been raised in. Though she still believed he was a chef, Leong quickly started to suspect that Dan was embellishing on the details of his life.
She knew some members of Slapshot, for instance, and found it hard to believe she hadn't heard his name in connection with the band. He told her that he had landed a job as executive chef at Bluefin, a seafood and sushi restaurant in the Times Square W hotel. This post originally appeared at Gawker. But he also had constant financial problems. He said, 'I can't pay my rent, what am I going to do?
When she spoke to him the next day, though, Dan wasn't in Montauk. Iuzzini was sick, he said, and had cancelled. Then she checked in on Eater. He'd been posting travel photos to his blog. Shortly thereafter, Leong decided to call Dan at work. There was no Dan Kay who worked at Bluefin, she was told. On their next scheduled date, she proposed a test: Why don't you go shopping and cook me dinner?
Dan bought porterhouse steaks, Brussels sprouts, mushrooms. Leong paid for the groceries. They went back to his apartment. The former Rainbow Room chef and two-time James Beard nominee served her an oven-baked porterhouse steaks that he hadn't bothered to sear and raw Brussels sprouts, thrown haphazardly on a plate.
Leong never saw him again. She later learned that Kay had been dating at least two other women he found on OkCupid at the same time, including one who she happened to know. Dan told that particular woman that he was "working at a tech job that provided database support for substance abuse outreach.
When Leong Googled some of the quotes that Dan had posted about himself on his OkCupid profile, she realized he had lifted them directly from Anthony Bourdain. Without OkCupid serving up a steady stream of eager, algorithmically selected marks, of course, Dan would have had a much less exciting dating life. Since the site permitted him to establish a profile under a false name, OkCupid was the ideal venue for him to market himself without a criminal background check or a Google search getting in the way.
Though Leong quickly found Dan's true identity and stuck around anyway, I spoke to other women who had fallen hard and long for the "Dan Kay" line. Men being what they are, cases of frauds using online dating sites to find vulnerable women are perennial enough to have ignited a debate about whether or not the sites should be forced to perform criminal background checks on users.
A New Jersey law passed in requires such sites to at least disclose whether or not they do True. Such a requirement might have prevented convicted murderer Abraham Fortune of using Match. It probably wouldn't have put a damper on the exploits of Jeffrey Marsalis, the Philadelphia man who was accused of serially drugging and raping more than 10 women he found through Match. Marsalis, a nursing student, told his alleged victims he was a trauma surgeon, CIA agent, veteran, and astronaut trainee.
But he didn't have a criminal record when he began scouting victims on Match. I'd rather everyone have a 'buyer beware' attitude. Every site has good and bad people. Anthony was just starting up a business revamping restaurants in July when he met Dan.
He can look you dead in the eye and just take you over. Anthony asked Dan to join the business as a partner. He called Dan's references first, and they all vouched for him. Anthony later learned that the references Dan listed were people who had worked with the real Dan Kay.
The first red flag came up when Dan proposed a new menu for a client in Hoboken, New Jersey. One was from Emeril Lagasse. But it wasn't long before Anthony realized he was in serious trouble.
Anthony started noticing mysterious withdrawals from the business checking account. The bottom fell out when the owners of the Hoboken restaurant approached Anthony with a sheaf of printed Google searches for Dan Kaufman. You need to tell me the truth. Anthony spent the next month trying, and failing, to get his money back. That doesn't even include the clients he lost. Though he knew that Dan was on probation, he initially tried to settle it without getting him thrown in jail.
Anthony tracked down Dan's parents to try to recoup. He quickly learned that Dan wasn't raised in Martha's Vineyard. When Anthony called, Diane started shrieking at him through the phone: "Who the fuck are you? Why are you calling? Daniel is not our responsibility! We already bailed him out once. Do not call me again. I'm sorry. He'd been posting travel photos to his blog.
Shortly thereafter, Leong decided to call Dan at work. There was no Dan Kay who worked at Bluefin, she was told. On their next scheduled date, she proposed a test: Why don't you go shopping and cook me dinner?
Dan bought porterhouse steaks, Brussels sprouts, mushrooms. Leong paid for the groceries. They went back to his apartment. The former Rainbow Room chef and two-time James Beard nominee served her an oven-baked porterhouse steaks that he hadn't bothered to sear and raw Brussels sprouts, thrown haphazardly on a plate. Leong never saw him again. She later learned that Kay had been dating at least two other women he found on OkCupid at the same time, including one who she happened to know.
Dan told that particular woman that he was "working at a tech job that provided database support for substance abuse outreach. When Leong Googled some of the quotes that Dan had posted about himself on his OkCupid profile, she realized he had lifted them directly from Anthony Bourdain.
Without OkCupid serving up a steady stream of eager, algorithmically selected marks, of course, Dan would have had a much less exciting dating life. Since the site permitted him to establish a profile under a false name, OkCupid was the ideal venue for him to market himself without a criminal background check or a Google search getting in the way.
Though Leong quickly found Dan's true identity and stuck around anyway, I spoke to other women who had fallen hard and long for the "Dan Kay" line. Men being what they are, cases of frauds using online dating sites to find vulnerable women are perennial enough to have ignited a debate about whether or not the sites should be forced to perform criminal background checks on users. A New Jersey law passed in requires such sites to at least disclose whether or not they do True.
Such a requirement might have prevented convicted murderer Abraham Fortune of using Match. It probably wouldn't have put a damper on the exploits of Jeffrey Marsalis, the Philadelphia man who was accused of serially drugging and raping more than 10 women he found through Match.
Marsalis, a nursing student, told his alleged victims he was a trauma surgeon, CIA agent, veteran, and astronaut trainee. But he didn't have a criminal record when he began scouting victims on Match. I'd rather everyone have a 'buyer beware' attitude.
Every site has good and bad people. Anthony was just starting up a business revamping restaurants in July when he met Dan. He can look you dead in the eye and just take you over. Anthony asked Dan to join the business as a partner. He called Dan's references first, and they all vouched for him.
Anthony later learned that the references Dan listed were people who had worked with the real Dan Kay. The first red flag came up when Dan proposed a new menu for a client in Hoboken, New Jersey.
One was from Emeril Lagasse. But it wasn't long before Anthony realized he was in serious trouble. Anthony started noticing mysterious withdrawals from the business checking account. The bottom fell out when the owners of the Hoboken restaurant approached Anthony with a sheaf of printed Google searches for Dan Kaufman.
You need to tell me the truth. Anthony spent the next month trying, and failing, to get his money back. That doesn't even include the clients he lost. Though he knew that Dan was on probation, he initially tried to settle it without getting him thrown in jail. Anthony tracked down Dan's parents to try to recoup. He quickly learned that Dan wasn't raised in Martha's Vineyard. When Anthony called, Diane started shrieking at him through the phone: "Who the fuck are you?
Why are you calling? Daniel is not our responsibility! We already bailed him out once. Do not call me again. I'm sorry.
She refused to comment. The Los Angeles restaurateur who shipped out half her menu on dry ice to his apartment after he posed as a potential investor requesting "samples. I've spent all this time trying to convince myself that I do. I'm a crazy person, and I need help. I've been like this since I was a kid. Eventually, he called Dan's parole officer, but was told that nothing could be done unless criminal charges were filed. When Anthony tried to do that, he says, both the NYPD and the Manhattan District Attorney's office told him that, since Dan was a partner in the business, it was a civil matter.
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