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Other Blood Companies Are Still Pissed About Theranos (slate.com) 88

What is was like competing with -- and dealing with the wreckage of -- the most infamous startup in the world. From a report: Theranos' collapse was as public as it gets for a Silicon Valley unicorn, beginning in 2015 with a widely read series of articles by former Wall Street Journal reporter John Carreyrou, who revealed that Theranos' technology was far less effective than advertised. The debacle went on to inspire the bestselling book Bad Blood by Carreyrou, an HBO documentary, and a forthcoming Hulu series starring Amanda Seyfried. This week, Holmes' highly anticipated trial begins in earnest. Jurors were sworn in last Thursday, and opening statements will begin on Wednesday. Prosecutors have charged Holmes with multiple counts of fraud and conspiracy related to the ascent and operations of Theranos, though she maintains her innocence. Once famous for a supposedly innovative approach to blood testing, now infamous for allegedly faking it, the names Theranos and Elizabeth Holmes aren't fading away anytime soon.

All of this has had a ripple effect for other companies that, like Theranos, were trying to make blood drawing and diagnostics easier for consumers. I spoke to five such companies recently about how they have dealt with unwelcome comparisons to Theranos, which has bedeviled the sector ever since Carreyrou's first piece on the subject. One company I reached out to expressed that it was hesitant to even appear in an article about Theranos. Even before Theranos imploded, its outsize presence was felt by other companies in the blood testing industry, for better and worse. "In the beginning, when Theranos was on its up slope, people were asking how we were ever going to compete with a company like Theranos when they've raised a billion dollars," said Daniel Levner, co-founder of Sight Diagnostics, a biotech company that sells a device that can conduct a blood count analysis from a finger prick.

Yet when Carreyrou's pieces began appearing in the Journal, comparisons to Theranos became a curse for its peers. "In pretty much every conversation we had for a year, Theranos would come up," said John Lewis, founder and CEO of Nanostics, a biotech company that sells a device that can use a very small amount of blood to diagnose and predict diseases. "Most people recognized that Theranos was mostly just bad founders, but it certainly was on everybody's mind." Lewis recounts that his company, which had only existed for a year and a half at the time, was in a pitch competition right as the Theranos scandal was coming to light. The very first question they got at the event was how the Nanostics product compared to Theranos'. From there, Nanostics took pains to distinguish itself from Theranos, down to the smallest details. For instance, the company in its promotional materials tried to stay away from Theranos' famous selling point of diagnosing diseases from a single drop of blood. "Our initial plan was to go out saying that we can detect disease signatures with a single drop of blood, but that was literally just when Theranos was going down for stating that they could do that when they couldn't," Lewis recalled. "So in our texts we said, 'two drops of blood.'"

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Other Blood Companies Are Still Pissed About Theranos

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  • by shanen ( 462549 ) on Wednesday September 08, 2021 @01:01PM (#61775909) Homepage Journal

    I'm surprised she isn't using a defense based on "We could have developed the technologies we were promising, if only you EVIL venture capitalists would have given us a few billion more dollars. It's not MY fault that you pulled the plug too fast. Short sighted profit seeking is NOT MY FAULT. I'm innocent as the driven snow!"

    • Cart before the horse. Working implementation, however small, then the big bucks. Just like Fusion and Thorium reactors.

      • Tell that to all the failed Kickstarter projects.
        • by shanen ( 462549 )

          The problem with Kickstarter is the lack of accountability. Unless it's changed, the Kickstarter "business model" is to take money off the top with no guarantee of anything. I think the CSB (Charity Share Brokerage) idea would be better because it would focus on recovering the costs, but with clear and considered accountability. The CSB would EARN the money by actually helping with the project management (including accountability and project assessment). Lack of project management is the main reason most pr

    • P.S. I still hate needles, so I would prefer the German approach. Just do my business and let the smart-ass toilet do the testing business. At least I think the Germans are leading in those technologies, but maybe the Japanese or Chinese will "flank" 'em with a better approach. But my point is that needles are pointed and invasive, so noninvasive German toilet tanks would be better.

      P.P.S. There's a WW II joke in there somewhere. I think. Maybe? You can't find it either?

      P.P.P.S. But I wasn't joking about the

      • I thought Gates was pushing the idea of the diagnostic toilet. Of course, auto-wired to the ad companies so they can instantly target you for whatever drug they think will "fix" you. 'Cause I want my toilet to stop working when the internet is down.

        • by shanen ( 462549 )

          Citation? Last I heard the Germans were still leading (the way down the smart toilet?).

          • I may have mixed up two toilet stories in my head. Google's providing me no links between Gates and the "smart" toilets. Maybe I finally drank enough to merge some synapses?

            • by shanen ( 462549 )

              Well now I feel like I'm supposed to investigate to see what the Germans are up to in the field. Can I substitute the research results from Toto's book? I think the final number was 43 degrees as the optimum angle...

    • You are ridiculing her for an argument you openly just made up and put into her mouth
    • by flyingfsck ( 986395 ) on Wednesday September 08, 2021 @01:57PM (#61776187)
      The problem is that Theranos committed fraud and endangered patients lives with fake tests.
      • by shanen ( 462549 )

        I'm not denying she's been a very naughty girl.

        (And see my other comment about the vampire and Frankenstein girls?)

    • There are massive numbers of laws designed to protect investors from just that. Investors are our aristocracy. They're the ones who make the laws because they're the ones with all the money and money is power. So they made laws to make sure that they were protected from scams and loss.

      And frustrates me to see small government types thinking they can win against that. Government is like a box of loaded rifles. You are the pick one up and defend yourself or you do what the person who picked the rifles up
      • by shanen ( 462549 )

        I don't think your position makes sense in the sordid world of VCs. Either than or you are using a different definition of unicorn, which seems to lead back to the very naughty girl again...

    • you know, the exact same nonsensical excuse all the pro-war pundits hawking staying in Afghanistan are saying... the same ones who make billions off the military industrial complex.
  • Abductive Junction (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    The fraud trial of Elizabeth Holmes begins this week, and it promises to be an enjoyable bit of theater for those interested in the workings of the Cloud People. Holmes founded a company called Theranos when she was just 19-years-old. She had dropped out of Stanford and promised to deliver miracle drug testing equipment. She attracted the support of all the beautiful people, who saw her as the living example of everything the Cloud People believed about the world.

    In reality, the company had nothing to offer

    • One thing's for sure, the chances she'll ever see any hard time are slim and none.

      • On the other hand, she stole from rich people, and that's usually a big no-no.
      • One thing's for sure, the chances she'll ever see any hard time are slim and none.

        Well, of course. She's rich, white and blond.

        No, that comment isn't "racist". It's accurate, and there is a difference.

        • She will do less time than Jordan Belfort.

        • Tell that to Martha Stewart.
        • by tomhath ( 637240 )
          Rich and white - yes; blond - no. Her hair and boobs are clearly fake...just like her voice and technology.
      • the chances she'll ever see any hard time are slim and none.

        That is how it should be.

        Prisons are for violent people who need to be physically separated from civilized society.

        For non-violent offenders like Elizabeth, there are always better alternatives. For instance, she could wear an ankle tracker and spend 60 hours per week cleaning bedpans in nursing homes.

        • by shanen ( 462549 )

          Mod parent something. But what?

        • the chances she'll ever see any hard time are slim and none.

          That is how it should be.

          Prisons are for violent people who need to be physically separated from civilized society.

          For non-violent offenders like Elizabeth, there are always better alternatives. For instance, she could wear an ankle tracker and spend 60 hours per week cleaning bedpans in nursing homes.

          People were reliant on this blood testing for life-saving measures, and people have deduced that the probability that deaths occurred from the 3 million+ tests done by Theranos, is high.

          I'm not sure what you call "violent people", but when someone knowingly commits medical fraud that results in the deaths of humans...well there's a special place for those kind of people, and it sure as FUCK isn't the local Hollywood Country Club for kinda-felons.

          • She's actually now married to an heir of some sort, living in a nice big house. Which means she may have a lot of resources for a legal defense (until the clueless husband figures out she's a major liability). But there's now certainly a lot of money to go after, a punitive judgement will have teeth and she can't just claim to be bankrupt and poor.

          • I'm not sure what you call "violent people"

            If Elizabeth Holmes lived in your neighborhood, would you be afraid to let your kids play outside?

            Of course not.

            Her past is relevant to her culpability and the severity of her punishment. But the type of punishment should only depend on her likely future behavior. The chance of her starting another medical device company is exactly zero.

            There is a famous saying in criminology: "We build prisons for people we are afraid of, then we fill them up with people we are mad at."

            We need to get away from the belie

            • I'm not sure what you call "violent people"

              If Elizabeth Holmes lived in your neighborhood, would you be afraid to let your kids play outside?

              Of course not.

              And that is one hell of an assumption. You have no idea how a formerly "stable" person will ultimately react when they are facing career ruin and the possibility of serious criminal charges. We've seen plenty of completely uncharacteristic violent reactions coming from was-such-a-nice.

              Her past is relevant to her culpability and the severity of her punishment. But the type of punishment should only depend on her likely future behavior. The chance of her starting another medical device company is exactly zero.

              Another assumption. You're telling me she's going to be deemed a flight risk, passport revoked, all private transport assets seized, and restricted to living in the US where "exactly zero" regulations are specifically limit

        • Prisons are for violent people who need to be physically separated from civilized society.

          For non-violent offenders like Elizabeth, there are always better alternatives. For instance, she could wear an ankle tracker and spend 60 hours per week cleaning bedpans in nursing homes.

          How about a good spanking?

      • It would be a waste of money to dedicate a high-security bed to her. Minimum security camps are the right choice for people like her. If you're vindictive, they're plenty miserable. Imagine plumbing so bad people are told not to drink the water, hostile staff, and terrifyingly inadequate medical systems.

        • It would be a waste of money to dedicate a high-security bed to her. Minimum security camps are the right choice for people like her. If you're vindictive, they're plenty miserable. Imagine plumbing so bad people are told not to drink the water, hostile staff, and terrifyingly inadequate medical systems.

          And why would you call this, a bad thing for her? She should feel right at home with that shit.

          Would be hilarious if she fell ill in prison, and they marched her up to the infirmary and said "don't worry...we're just going to take a small sample of your blood with this new medical tester we got on sale.."

        • by sjames ( 1099 )

          I would prefer minimal but adequate conditions and community service.

    • Huge "Make it up as you go along" and "Fit my narrative to the story" article. Not worth the read.
    • by ClickOnThis ( 137803 ) on Wednesday September 08, 2021 @02:05PM (#61776223) Journal

      A curious article. My thoughts:

      1. I think Holmes' gender is largely irrelevant. Yes, she is an unconventionally attractive woman, and that may have helped her get noticed. But the people she hoodwinked never stop thinking about what's going on with their money. She had to deliver a believable business model in order to get funding.

      2. Holmes may have fashioned her image after Steve Jobs, but the similarity ends there. Whatever you think of Jobs, the fact is that his company consistently delivered the goods. Perhaps both had the temerity to step into uncharted territory, but only Jobs knew how to steer toward success.

      3. Abductive reasoning is just another name for a Bayesian prior. Absent other data, it is the best support for a tentative conclusion. As new data becomes available, you adjust your reasoning (again, in a Bayesian sense.) Hopefully the trial will uncover what happened with this step. My guess is that Holmes and her posse hid or obfuscated the data.

      4. Playing the 'female victim' card at trial will not work for Holmes. (See 1.) I confess that's my own abductive reasoning at work. Let's see what happens.

      • She had to deliver a believable business model in order to get funding.

        But she didn't do that. The whole point of the above narrative, whatever it might have gotten right or wrong (and it did get this right) is that her funding was based on bullshit. It wasn't believable to someone who knew what they were investing in... or more to the point, they weren't, because it wasn't believable.

    • The fraud trial of Elizabeth Holmes begins this week, and it promises to be an enjoyable bit of theater for those interested in the workings of the Cloud People.

      I'm not entirely sure who the "Cloud People" are supposed to be. Oligarchs? Cultural elites? Progressives?

      In reality, the company had nothing to offer other than the promise to fulfill those prophesies the Cloud People cherished. Holmes adopted the Steve Jobs black turtleneck and spoke in a weird deep voice. Like all grifters, she was short on specifics, but long on inspirational flattery. This got some of the most famous men in the world to support her company, giving it an aura of authenticity.

      They didn't support her because of the turtleneck and deep voice, they supported her because she was incredibly well connected. Her dad was a VP at Enron, her childhood friend's dad was Tim Draper.

      In many respects, Holmes is the poster child for the new religion. The reimagined gender role for women is just women doing the things men normally do. You see this in movies where the normal male lead is replaced by a strong diverse female who does all the same things as a male lead, even the personality. There is really nothing new about the new gender roles. The new ideal female is nothing more than a fraud against nature, a fraud that is eventually undone by observable reality.

      Wait... so you're now arguing (I'm assuming you're the author of the blog post, or at least a big fan) that female entrepreneurs are a "fraud against nature"?

      Holmes and her business partner, another unicorn of the Progressive imagination named Ramesh “Sunny” Balwani,

      How did a 37 year old dating an 18 year old become

  • I'm siding with the werewolves on this.

  • I thought pets.com was the most infamous startup in the world. Is it time for a new champion?

  • I'm still pissed (Score:5, Interesting)

    by aerogems ( 339274 ) on Wednesday September 08, 2021 @01:39PM (#61776105)

    I'm someone who has a major needle phobia as a result of a childhood trauma, so I was really hopeful about the promise the company made. Fortunately I never actually used any "services" offered by Theranos.

    Sadly, even established players in the field aren't exactly immune. Through a quirk of fate I wound up working for a large company that makes blood testing machines and was there during the time when the business unit president decided that products would be shipped on a specific date regardless of if they were ready or not. Engineers were pressured to cut corners and multiple products flopped hard as a result. I remember one time, we were literally still processing the necessary changes when they started the launch party down the hall... not that they bothered to invite any of us. And the reason they decided on that day to release the product? Because a customer threatened to cancel a large order if they didn't ship it by a specific date. That was one of the products that landed with all the grace of a lead balloon and the would-be flagship product was quickly discontinued and never to be spoken of again. I'm sure the luckless product manager was also pushed out. They would also routinely sell pilot products, which hadn't cleared the FDA, to customers in order to meet promised shipping dates made by the sales team.

    Theranos was just the culmination of all the different unethical things that routinely go on in other established companies under a single roof.

    • I'm sorry you have a needle phobia, however you're going to have to live with it.

      The thing about Theranos is the tech companies and investors loved the company and the story, specifically the female founder angle (her investors were all tech-focused at the time), the media loved the story, but the biotech and medical community ridiculed her. The tech community was so used to disrupting old ways of doing things that they saw the push back from the medical and biotech community akin to holding on to old

  • You keep using that word...

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