Archive for the ‘Donald Trump’ Category

Which world leaders are richer than Donald Trump? – Washington Post

President Trump met with Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, deputy crown prince and minister of defense of Saudi Arabia, on March 14 at the White House. (The Washington Post)

This Tuesday, President Donald Trump met with powerful Saudi Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman at the White House. The two men no doubt had plenty to discuss, including but not limited to regional issues in the Middle East, the threat of terrorism and oil market woes.

The meeting was notable in an another way, too. Trump is a man known for his lifelong desire to accumulate wealth and the lavish way that he puts that wealth to use. And in Mohammed bin Salman, he may have met someone rare: A foreign leader who is richer than he is.

True, the young prince isn't yet technically the head of state. He's currently second in line to the Saudi throne. However, many have noted that the 31-year-old Mohammed has been rising fast through the Saudi royal family, taking a prominent role in the kingdom's attempts to wean its economy off oil money and in the troubling war in Yemen.

But there's no doubt that the Saudi royal family is very, very wealthy. And, like Trump, the royals are known for their opulence. Mohammed's father, King Salman, is reported to have taken 506 tons of luggage on a recent trip to Asia, including two limousines and two elevators, as well as an entourage of 1,500. There are rumors that the king ishoping to sink billions of dollars into purchasing an atoll in the Maldives.

The Saud family's wealth almost certainly exceeds Trump's own net worth, which he has estimated at$8.7 billion although other sources peg it far lower. But estimating the full extent of the Sauds' wealth is surprisingly difficult.

It is not publicly known how wealthy theSaudi royals are. One widely cited estimate pegs King Salman's net worth at more than $17 billion, but working out the wealth ofworld leaders is a notoriously fraught business. Like Trump, many don't release documents to make the full extent of their wealth known (thoughthis is also true of many of the mega-rich who are not involved in politics).

What makes it more complicated with world leaders is that it can often be hard to distinguish their wealth from that of the states they run. Largely for this reason, companies that compile lists of billionaires, including Forbes and Bloomberg, tend to make a point of not including world leaders in their rankings.

Some estimates do seep out, however, so we have a broad sense of who might be in Trump's wealth bracket.Like the Saudis, many are members of royal families who sit on many generations of royal wealth. In 2011, Forbes estimated that the richest was Thai King Bhumibol Adulyadej, who had wealth of $30 billion-plusthat year. (Bhumibol has since died, but his wealth may have been passed on to his son, now-King Vajiralongkorn).

Other royals estimated to hold great wealth include the sultan of Brunei, Hassanal Bolkiah, with more than $20 billion, according to Forbes in 2011, andSheikh Khalifa bin Zayed al-Nahyan of Abu Dhabi and Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktum of Dubai, who each had estimated wealth of $15 billion.

There are nonroyal world leaders with high levels of wealth, too, though they tend to be autocrats and the details of their wealth are murky. In 2012,the Guardian estimated that Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian president who has overseen six years of civil war,had wealth of $1.5 billion, though it could be far more if various state-related assets in the country were included. Exactly how that wealth has changed since 2012 is not clear.

While Trump isn't likely to meet with Assad anytime soon, a meeting with Vladimir Putin could soon be in the cards. Kremlin watchers have pondered theRussian president's alleged worth for years; one 2015 estimate put it at $200 billion. The Russian leader himself pegs his wealth far lower, andthere is little reliable evidence either way, but it's clear Putin has led a opulent life for the16 years he has resided at the top of Russian power.As a reportby Russian dissidents noted in 2012, he has access to 43 aircraft worth over $1 billion.

Rumors have also swirled around the wealth of Chinese leaders.Bloomberg reportedin 2012 that relatives of current President Xi Jinping had many millions in assets, while a New York Times investigation into the wealth of former prime minister Wen Jiabao found hisrelatives held atleast $2.7 billion in assets. Exact figures were never confirmed by the Chinese government, and both publications faced retribution for their reporting.

It's unusual for a U.S. leader to be in this class of international wealth. Certainly, American presidents have often been rich in today's terms, George Washington might be worth about $525 million. Not only is Trump thought to be the wealthiest U.S. president ever, but he is the only recent one to refuse to offer a fuller glimpse of his wealth by releasing his tax returns, and he stands accused of remarkable conflicts of interest. His opaque finances and their unclear relationship to the stateput him in some unusual company.

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Which world leaders are richer than Donald Trump? - Washington Post

Donald Trump Jr: At Fundraiser, President’s Son Says ‘Zero Contact’ With Dad – NBCNews.com

Donald Trump Jr. speaks at the 2016 Republican National Convention in Cleveland in July. Michael Reynolds / EPA

Trump Jr. who played key roles in both the campaign and the transition admitted Saturday that he found it hard leaving politics behind, despite the pressures of his new business role.

"I thought I was out of politics after Election Day and [would] get back to my regular life and my family," Trump Jr. said. "But I couldn't."

"Deals are still exciting," he added. "But when you're the sort of guy out there every day, 24-7, fighting in this thing it's like a great fight."

Trump spoke at the invitation of Doug Deason, a Dallas millionaire and prominent donor to wealthy conservative activists Charles and David Koch. He also served as a trustee on Trump's finance team.

Saturday was the first time that Trump Jr. had publicly dipped his toe back into politics since his father's inauguration. He spoke at the annual Reagan Day dinner in Dallas a key fundraising event for the local Republican group.

Within 60 seconds of Trump's having left the stage, the MC of the dinner asked for donations, suggesting the group hoped to raise $25,000 just in the time period of the dinner.

The role of Trump's children in his administration has raised questions in the past. His three adult children sat in on meetings with foreign heads of state during the transition, and they remain closely involved in business deals overseas.

Also speaking at Saturday's event was Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, sharing a stage with a member of the Trump family for the first time since he clashed bitterly with candidate Trump during the GOP primaries.

"I saw on TV that [Cruz] had had dinner with my father earlier this week," Trump Jr. told the crowd. "Now, I don't even know if I have to deliver a punch line to that. But it's sort of ironic."

Speaking to an audience of Texans, Manhattan-born Trump Jr. took a swipe at his home state, which voted for Trump's opponent, Hillary Clinton, 59 percent to 36 percent.

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"Texas gave us the funds that we needed," Trump said. "You guys get it. You understand the freedoms ... so many of which we've lost where I come from in the peoples' republic of New York. ... I can say that and mean it because I see it."

He also hailed his father's progress since coming to power.

"I'm watching more take place in two months than I saw in two terms before," he said.

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Donald Trump Jr: At Fundraiser, President's Son Says 'Zero Contact' With Dad - NBCNews.com

A curious timeline of trademarks granted to Donald Trump by an increasingly helpful China – Quartz


Quartz
A curious timeline of trademarks granted to Donald Trump by an increasingly helpful China
Quartz
US president Donald J. Trump's swelling trademark portfolio in China hasonce againraised eyebrows over potential conflicts of interest, after the Chinese government granted him pre-approval to 35 new marks in recent weeks. At the heart of the ...

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A curious timeline of trademarks granted to Donald Trump by an increasingly helpful China - Quartz

MacroSolve: Donald Trump Jr.’s favorite patent enforcer – Ars Technica

Enlarge / Donald Trump's sons, Donald Trump Jr. (L) and Eric Trump, walk in Trump Tower on November 14, 2016 in New York City. They will be in charge of the Trump Organization's myriad businesses while Donald Trump is president.

Getty Images

Before President Donald Trump took the oath of office in January, he handed offmanagement of the Trump Organization's business interests to his two eldest sons, Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump. The family-owned company has been in variouslines of business over the yearsmost famously, there are hotels, casinos, andgolf resorts, some owned and others licensed. Ties, steaks, and a controversial seminar business have also borne the Trump name.

But DonaldTrump Jr. has also been involved with one particular business withrealimplications for the technology sector: patent enforcement. Beginning in 2011, Trump Jr. worked forand owned part ofa company called MacroSolve. While MacroSolve had supported itself selling software for more than a decade, by 2011 its focus had shifted to patent lawsuits as the company'smain source of profit.

MacroSolve's actions soon made it part ofa longstanding debate in the tech industry over"patent trolls," companies that do little or no business other than filing patent lawsuits. ButMacroSolve management never accepted the idea that the company was a "troll," and it said so in interviews.

"If you enforce your rights, you're a troll," MacroSolve CEO Jim McGill saidin a 2014 interview with Ars Technica. "If you don't, big companies will walk all over you."

Whatever youcall it, MacroSolve's brand of patent enforcement had initial successits lawsuitsearned the company close to$5 million. When thelitigation campaign eventually collapsed in 2014, MacroSolve was absorbed by a defense contractor called Drone Aviation Holding Corporation. That organization has its own close ties to the Trump presidency, and there's no tellingwhether, or if, Drone Aviation will try to enforce old MacroSolve patents or its own patents.

President Trump's views on patents and patent reform stillaren't clear, but family members have strongly influenced his policy views in other areas so farand there's a bit more clarity as to whereTrump Jr. stands on this topic. Afterbrowsing through MacroSolve's litigation history, reading every MacroSolve 10-K, and looking through every news clip and press release that mentionedthe words "MacroSolve" and "Trump"via the Nexis database, a pro-patent vantage point emerges. Ontop of all that, public statements from Trump Jr. himself revealsomestrongly held personal views on patent policy that emerged duringhis work for MacroSolve.

MacroSolve was originally known as Anyware Mobile Solutions, an Oklahoma company founded in 1997 by David Payne. The plan was to create applications for PDAs and cellphones, according to a Tulsa Worldstory on MacroSolve's "rise and fall."In 2008, the company went public, hoping to profit by helping businesses embrace the era of the smartphone.

It didn't work out. Between 2008 and 2010, sales plunged from $2.7 million to $638,000. But MacroSolve got one last, great chanceUS Patent No.7,822,816, issued in October 2010. At the time, MacroSolve's chairman said the patent could make the company into a billion-dollar business. The patent describes a "remote computing device" that sends out a questionnaire to a user, gets answers, and makes those answers available on the Web. Thus, in MacroSolve's view, it applies to anyone using questionnaireson a mobile app.

In early 2011, MacroSolve embraced patent litigation as a means of making money. The company went in big: overthe course of a year, MacroSolve filed dozens of lawsuits against 59 different companies, all filed in the patent-friendly Eastern District of Texas.Patent trolling had hit a peak, and it was easier than ever to squeeze money from companies afraid of litigating in East Texas. Discovery rules in that district were tough on defendants, and judges rarely decided cases on summary judgment, making patent litigation hugely expensive.After just a few months of filing lawsuits, MacroSolve reaped more than $1 million in settlementsmuch more than its struggling software business was worth.

Perhaps fearingblowback from its aggressive litigation campaign, MacroSolve's board decided to make someone else the company's public face. That's when it turned to Donald Trump Jr., who was hired on as the new spokesman in September 2011. Trump Jr. strucka deal to do two years of PR work, and he received at least $45,000 and 5,000,000 shares of MacroSolve stock as an initial payment, according to company financial reports.

In interviews and comments made at the time, Trump Jr., then executive vice president of the Trump Organization, described MacroSolve as a "pioneer" that he was excited to partner with. He called mobile apps "digital real estate." He said the Trump Organization would be integrating MacroSolve technology into its businesses.

"Just as in physical real estate, digital real estate is location, location, location," Trump Jr. said in a statement after he was hired in 2011."Having a company's brand and logo on the screen of mobile devices is a valuable place to be for a company looking to drive revenues and productivity."

In an interview with Oklahoma City'sJournal-Record, Trump Jr. said that he would be "opening his Rolodex" to help MacroSolve expand beyond Oklahoma. The company's patent was set tobe a big part of that effort. MacroSolve owned "a landmark patent with stability and very high growth potential as one of the few publicly traded companies in the industry," the new spokespersontold the newspaper.

Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Trump Jr. immediately took on a public role in pushing the newly patent-focused company.In November 2011, heintroduced MacroSolve CEO Steve Signoff to investors at the New York City Small Cap Conference.

"On our show Celebrity Apprentice, it really only takes one single factor to set an apprentice apart from another," Trump Jr. told the crowd. "It isnt their popularity, their appearance, their famous or infamous name... Its their edge."

For businesses, that "edge" is a good"mobility solution," said Trump Jr. "That is why it was so important for me and Trump-branded businesses to find a mobility-solutions company with that edge in the digital world. That's MacroSolve."

MacroSolve had "that hunter's nose," a proven record in mobile, and "their patent portfolio puts them years ahead in innovation," he added.

If the company's patent was innovative, that innovation wasn't translating into sales of products or services. Thecompany'ssales plummeted through the end of 2011, but MacroSolve executives told investors to hang onthe Trump "edge" was just around the corner.

"These third quarter revenues do not yet reflect the significant and strategic business development agreements we've put in place in Q2 and Q3 with Donald Trump Jr. and The Richards Group, both of which we expect will yield us major national accounts and sales that will create a very positive impact," MacroSolve CEOSteve Signoff told investors in December 2011, explaining away dismal financial results.

Sales of the company's products kept slowing as MacroSolve's docket of East Texas cases grew. It filed 10 more lawsuits in December 2011, puttingglobal travel companies on notice that their apps infringed the '816 patent. Four airlines got suedSouthwest, United, Continental, and American. So, too, did Priceline, Hotels.com, Travelocity, Hertz, and Avis.

Inearly 2012, MacroSolve filedlawsuits against a new batch of corporate defendants, including Facebook, Walmart, Yelp, Geico, Marriott, AOL, and Inter-Continental Hotels. It also sued Newegg, a retailer whose top brass had spoken out against patent trolls. Lawyers at Newegg and Geicowould ultimately bring together a coalition of companiesto fight MacroSolve's patent.

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MacroSolve: Donald Trump Jr.'s favorite patent enforcer - Ars Technica

What would Mark Twain think of Donald Trump? – The San Luis Obispo Tribune


The San Luis Obispo Tribune
What would Mark Twain think of Donald Trump?
The San Luis Obispo Tribune
Thanks to the criticisms they've leveled in articles, interviews, tweets and letters to the editor, we know that many contemporary authors, from Philip Roth to J.K. Rowling, have a dim view of Donald J. Trump. But what would leading writers of the past ...

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What would Mark Twain think of Donald Trump? - The San Luis Obispo Tribune