Reader Adam forwarded us this bizarre email from Patrick Byrne, CEO of Overstock.com.
patrick byrne
Skype, Dark Lord of the Sith, Conspires Against StreamCast
Someone over at StreamCast Networks is channeling the ogresque spirit of Patrick Byrne: they’ve sued eBay, Skype and 21 other companies for engineering an insidious, overarching conspiracy to cost StreamCast billions of dollars. Luckily, they did not describe the conspiracy as originating from the Dark Lord of the Sith, but you generally don’t say such a thing in a legal briefing.
Lunatic Overstock CEO Ebullient Over SEC Subpoena
We reported last week that the SEC has subpoenaed Overstock.com. And we all already know that Overstock CEO Patrick Byrne is out of his flipping mind. Put those two facts together? This amazing press release straight from Overstock.com, titled (we swear to god!) “Overstock.com Celebrates Receipt of SEC Subpoena.”
SEC Sticks Subpoena to Overstock
Overstock.com is an embattled victim under attack by its rivals and a cabal of journalists and shortsellers working to destroy its good name.
SEC Tells Agents to “Check Yourself Before You Wreck Yourself”
s enforcement division for subpoenaing two journalists, declaring their behavior renegade.
Overstock.com’s CEO Patrick Byrne ‘Perhaps’ is an Ogre
We know Overstock.com sometimes has crappy customer service, as we amusingly revealed.
B2.0’s “101 Dumbest Moments in Business” 2005
Join us as we read the Business 2.0 (on CNNMoney) piece, ‘101 Dumbest Moments in Business (2005),’ featuring old favorites like the Sony BMG rootkit scandal and Overstock.com’s Patrick Byrne’s famous “Sith Lord” investor call, as well as new gems like this:Speaking at an ad industry event in…
Overstock.com’s Patrick Byrne Leaks Own Interview
Following the ins-and-outs of business is not our forte, but we continue to be enraptured by the kooky CEO of Overstock.com, Patrick Byrne. After making a call to investors where he assured them that he was not, among other things, a Jedi, he’s now followed up by publishing an email interview with Business Week’s e-Business editor Tim Mullaney—before the Business Week article has been published.