How 'The Ruckus' Started and Why Scott Is Missing A Billion Dollars...

Google, Facebook, Netflix, YouTube did not exist until Scott invented, engineered, patented, built, launched, and marketed what they later copied to form their companies...years later.

The U.S. Patent Office, State and Federal records, leaked documents, contracts, emails and massive sets of other evidence proves this.

Scott had his companies up and running before these competitors were even formed, in many cases. Scott was already doing everything that the Silicon Valley competitors copied and did years later.

These were not "accidental coincidences" or GMTA situations. The founders and main investors of these competitors came in, under the guise of "potential partnering or investing" looked at Scott's stuff under confidentiality agreements, and copied his technology because they could not figure out something better on their own.The chose to cheat rather than compete!

They will do ANYTHING to avoid facing Scott in an equally resourced jury trial or Congressional Hearing. They have spent  vast millions of dollars in resources to blockade the day of reckoning. This same group of Stanford frat club brats engaged in the dirty deeds so they have to pay for their intellectual property thefts, media attacks, and deceptions. Their specific names have been provided to the FBI, DOJ, SEC, CFTC, FTC and other investigators.

In the meantime, Scott's peers have brought the "bad guys" other crimes and corruptions to every state investigation, law enforcement and regulatory agency in every nation in the world. This has resulted in hundreds of cases against them for their illicit deeds including bribery, tax evasion, stock market manipulation and other crimes.

Although they have billions of dollars to defer, delay, obfuscate and avoid the inevitable... the long arm of justice is coming and the law has already begun to carve them up! It is their choice to either 1.) pay for Scott's damages or 2.) suffer their own terminations via a long, slow, tsunami of federal cases and investigative news disclosures.



Who did-it-first and who is ‘The Silicon Valley Cartel’?

The Plaintiff is an inventor, CEO, Program Director and Forensic Investigator. He has hundreds of letters of reference from famous media, corporate and political figures. He has a large number of seminal invention awards from the U.S. Government. He has White House, mayoral, congressional and State commendations. Invariably, a group of Silicon Valley billionaires in a notorious "tech frat boy club" have copied his inventions, made money off of them and put media hit-jobs on Plaintiff to keep his companies from competing with their, later, copy-cat efforts. Plaintiff has testified about, and been interviewed about, this anti-trust violating cartel.


- He built the first fully integrated virtual reality 'Holodeck' and 'CAVE' chamber system.

Who says so?

The United States Patent Office, time-stamped mails between him, his staff and they key parties, NDA’s, contracts, press clippings, broadcast news videos, feature news articles, federal reports, Oliver Stone's Wild Palm's crew, Congressional reports and other indisputable evidence. The Silicon Valley Cartel of Sandhill Road frat boy “venture capitalist” guys, examined it under the guise of “possible investment”, copied it and ran anti-trust schemes to stop it from competing with their copy-cat versions. It costs over one million dollars in legal expenses, per violator, to sue them for their anti-trust and IP violations.


- He built the first company that was later copied to become Google.

Who says so?

The United States Patent Office, emails between him, his staff and they key parties, NDA’s, contracts, press clippings, broadcast news videos, federal reports, Congressional reports and other indisputable evidence. The Silicon Valley Cartel of Sandhill Road frat boy “venture capitalist” guys, examined it under the guise of “possible investment”, copied it and ran anti-trust schemes to stop it from competing with their copy-cat versions. It costs over one million dollars in legal expenses, per violator, to sue them for their anti-trust and IP violations.


- He built the first company that was later copied to become Facebook.

Who says so?

The United States Patent Office, emails between him, his staff and they key parties, NDA’s, contracts, press clippings, broadcast news videos, federal reports, Congressional reports and other indisputable evidence. The Silicon Valley Cartel of Sandhill Road frat boy “venture capitalist” guys, examined it under the guise of “possible investment”, copied it and ran anti-trust schemes to stop it from competing with their copy-cat versions. It costs over one million dollars in legal expenses, per violator, to sue them for their anti-trust and IP violations.


- He built the first company that was later copied to become YouTube, Hulu and Netflix.

Who says so?

The United States Patent Office, emails between him his staff and they key parties, NDA’s, contracts, press clippings, broadcast news videos, federal reports, Congressional reports and other indisputable evidence. The Silicon Valley Cartel of Sandhill Road frat boy “venture capitalist” guys, examined it under the guise of “possible investment”, copied it and ran anti-trust schemes to stop it from competing with their copy-cat versions. It costs over one million dollars in legal expenses, per violator, to sue them for their anti-trust and IP violations.


- He built the first car manufacturing company that was Tesla’s biggest competitor . The United States Government financed it, it won more patents and it beat the tech Cartel’s Tesla on every metric.

Who says so?

The Dept of Energy Documents, Congress, The United States Patent Office, emails between him, his staff, famous politicians and they key parties, NDA’s, contracts, press clippings, broadcast news videos, federal reports, Congressional reports, The Federal Lawsuits his associates filed and won and other indisputable evidence. The Silicon Valley Cartel of Sandhill Road frat boy “venture capitalist” guys, examined it under the guise of “possible investment”, copied it and ran anti-trust schemes to stop it from competing with their copy-cat versions. It costs over one million dollars in legal expenses, per violator, to sue them for their anti-trust and IP violations.


- He knows and worked with President’s of the United States, Vice Presidents of the United States, Senators Of The United States, Mayors of San Francisco, their financiers and their families and has shared homes with some of them.

Who says so?
Photos, recordings, emails between him and they key parties, White House documents, FBI reports, NDA’s, contracts, press clippings, broadcast news videos, federal reports, commendations, proclamations, City reports, purchase orders, government contracts, checks, voice mails, hacks, leaks, Congressional reports and other indisputable evidence. The Silicon Valley Cartel of Sandhill Road frat boy “venture capitalist” guys are the financiers and beneficiaries of many of these figures.


- Some well-known parties were the competitors, operatives, beneficiaries and public policy developers that approached Plaintiff under the guise of ‘helping’ his team’s efforts but they turned out to be spying on the technology and covertly operating together in violation of anti-trust laws.

Who says so?
The FBI, the SEC, ICIJ, photos, recordings, emails between him and they key parties, White House documents, FBI reports, NDA’s, contracts, press clippings, broadcast news videos, federal reports, commendations, proclamations, City reports, purchase orders, checks, arrest warrants against those third-parties,voice mails, hacks, leaks, Congressional reports and other indisputable evidence. The Silicon Valley Cartel of Sandhill Road frat boy “venture capitalist” guys, examined it under the guise of “possible investment”, copied it and ran anti-trust schemes to stop it from competing with their copy-cat versions. It costs over one million dollars in legal expenses, per violator, to sue them for their anti-trust and IP violations.


What organizations can verify that a tech cartel of oligarchs operates an organized scheme of intellectual property theft:

US Inventor | Innovators, Inventors, Dreamers, and Builders

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We Need Inventors. America Loves Inventors. Join Our Voice -- Help Us Enact Legislation to Restore the Rights of Inventors. We want to help restore our once-great patent system, a Constitutional system in which ideas can be protected and thus shared for the benefit of society.


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COME AND LEARN: New Trends and WHAT'S NEXT in Prototyping using 3D Printing, Injection Molding and CNC Cutting/Stamping.AND LOW-VOLUME PRODUCTION technologies. The speaker, Gus Breiland, is a Sr. Technical Sales Engineer at Protolabs - one of the premier digital manufacturing companies in the world today.

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Building a community of innovators today to protect the inventors of tomorrow. Innovation is the cornerstone of the American Dream.



The adversarial third parties and their politicians, own parts of all of the competitor companies, get bribes from all of those companies and are socially involved with the people from all of those companies per FBI, SEC and private investigators.

Plaintiff was asked to assist law enforcement with white collar crime stings and task-forces of these cross-state crimes for many decades. This has resulted in a significant number of high-profile arrests and public official terminations.

This Cartel, and the State and Federal politicians they own, operated a $30M+ hit-job on him, in reprisal, using government funds, servers, networks, employees, contractors and other state resources.

The government entities who were financed by, working for, dating, sleeping with, insider trading with, in ‘revolving door’ kick-back schemes with and otherwise covertly involved with, these culprits must pay Plaintiff for his damages, losses and other offsets.

The culprits who engaged in these crimes and illicit deeds must also pay Plaintiff for his damages, losses and other offsets.

Over 300,000 pages of evidence has been filed with federal law enforcement and regulatory agencies. The Cartel has spent tens of millions of dollars to lobby and influence enforcement authorities to hold off taking actions on these matters. The Cartel has spent tens of millions of dollars to run character assassination, revenge, vendetta, defamation and media attacks against us.

Our team has spent years influencing the Government to launch multiple federal investigations, which are now underway, into each of the culprits.

One of the "Godfather's" of the Silicon Valley Cartel is Eric Schmidt. He is typical of the Cartel bosses that know each other, date each other, party together, use the same lawyers, get involved in the same sex scandals and lawsuits and pay stock bribes to the same politicians..

Eric Schmidt has A psychotic need to control governments and society. Eric Schmidt does not think twice about hiring assassins, media hit-job operators, Black Cube and Fusion GPS hatchet job providers and bribe-positive lobbyists

In July 2016, Raymond Thomas, a four-star general and head of the U.S. Special Operations Command, hosted a guest: Eric Schmidt, the chairman of Google.

General Thomas, who served within the 1991 gulf war and deployed many times to Afghanistan, spent the higher half of a day showing Mr. Schmidt around Special Operations Command’s headquarters in Tampa, Fla. They scrutinized prototypes for a robotic exoskeleton suit and joined operational briefings, which Mr. Schmidt needed to study extra about as a result of he had recently begun advising the military on technology.

After the go-to, as they rode in a Chevy Suburban towards an airport, the conversation turned to a form of artificial intelligence.

“You absolutely suck at machine learning,” Mr. Schmidt informed General Thomas, the officer recalled. “If I got under your tent for a day, I could solve most of your problems.” General Thomas said he was so offended that he needed to throw Mr. Schmidt out of the car, however refrained.

Four years later, Mr. Schmidt, 65, has channeled his blunt assessment of the military’s tech failings into a private campaign to revamp America’s defense forces with extra engineers, extra software program and extra A.I. In the method, the tech billionaire, who left Google last year, has reinvented himself because of the prime liaison between Silicon Valley and the national security community.

Mr. Schmidt now sits on two government advisory boards aimed toward bounce beginning technological innovation in the Defense Department. His confidants embrace former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and ex-Deputy Defense Secretary Robert Work. And by means of his personal enterprise capital agency and a $13 billion fortune, Mr. Schmidt has invested millions of {dollars} into more than half a dozen defense start-ups.

In an interview, Mr. Schmidt — by turns thoughtful, pedagogical and hubristic — stated he had embarked on an effort to modernize the U.S. military because it was “stuck in software in the 1980s.”

He portrayed himself as a successful technologist who didn’t consider in retirement and who owed a debt to the country for his wealth — and who now had time and perception to resolve one of America’s hardest issues. The purpose, he stated, “should be to have as many software companies to supply software of many, many different kinds: military, H.R. systems, email systems, things which involve military intelligence, weapons systems and what have you.”

Mr. Schmidt is urgent ahead with a Silicon Valley worldview the place advances in software program and A.I. are the keys to determining nearly any situation. While that philosophy has led to social networks that spread disinformation and different unintended penalties, Mr. Schmidt stated he was convinced that making use of new and comparatively untested technology to complex conditions — together with lethal ones — would make service members extra environment friendly and bolster the United States in its competition with China.

His techno-solutionism is difficult by his ties to Google. Though Mr. Schmidt left the corporate’s board final June and has no official working function, he holds $5.Three billion in shares of Google’s parent, Alphabet. He also stays on the payroll as an adviser, incomes a $1 annual wage, with two assistants stationed at Google’s Silicon Valley headquarters.

That has led to allegations that Mr. Schmidt is placing Google’s financial pursuits forward of different concerns in his protection work. Late final yr, a federal court ordered a congressional advisory committee he leads to flip over data that would make clear whether or not Mr. Schmidt had advocated his business interests whereas heading the group.

Mr. Schmidt stated he had adopted guidelines to keep away from conflicts. “Everybody is rule-bound at the Pentagon, and we are too,” he stated.

Google and the Defense Department declined to touch upon Mr. Schmidt’s work.

Even without these issues, shifting the military’s path isn’t any easy process. While Mr. Schmidt has helped generate reports and recommendations about know-how for the Pentagon, few have been adopted.

“I’m sure he’ll be frustrated,” stated Representative Mac Thornberry, a Republican of Texas who nominated Mr. Schmidt in 2018 to an advisory committee on A.I. “Unlike the private sector, you can’t just snap your fingers and make it happen.”

Mr. Schmidt acknowledged that progress was sluggish. “I am bizarrely told by my military friends that they have moved incredibly fast, showing you the difference of time frames between the world I live in and the world they live in,” he stated.

But he stated he had little intention of backing down. “The way to understand the military is that the soldiers spend a great deal of time looking at screens. And human vision is not as good as computer vision,” he stated. “It’s insane that you have people going to service academies, and we spend an enormous amount of training, training these people, and we put them in essentially monotonous work.”

Mr. Schmidt’s first brush with the military got here in 1976, whereas he was in graduate college on the University of California, Berkeley. There, he centered on research on distributed computing, funded by cash from Darpa, an analysis arm of the Defense Department.

The work catapulted Mr. Schmidt into his technology profession. After finishing his graduate studies in pc science, he labored at various tech firms for more than twenty years, together with the networking software maker Novell. In 2001, Google appointed him chief govt.

The search engine firm was then in its infancy. Its 20-something founders, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, were contemporary out of a Stanford University doctorate program and had little business expertise. Mr. Schmidt was hired to assist information them, offering “adult supervision,” which he did — after which some.

Mr. Schmidt took Google public in 2004 and built it right into a behemoth, diversifying into smartphones, cloud computing and self-driving cars. The success turned him right into an enterprise movie star. In 2009, he served as a tech adviser to the Obama administration.

In 2011, with Google price almost $400 billion, the corporate introduced Mr. Page was able to resume the C.E.O. reins. Mr. Schmidt turned govt chairman.

In that function, Mr. Schmidt took on new tasks, many of which introduced him to Washington. In 2012, he participated in categorized briefings on cybersecurity with Pentagon officers as half of the Enduring Security Framework program. In 2015, he attended a seminar on the banks of the Potomac River, hosted by then-Defense Secretary Ash Carter, on the use of know-how inside the government.

“It was all interesting to me,” Mr. Schmidt stated. “I didn’t really know much about it.”

He additionally traveled to North Korea, Afghanistan and Libya whereas writing a guide about know-how and diplomacy, and dabbled in politics, lending technical assist to Hillary Clinton within the run-up to her 2016 presidential marketing campaign.

His enterprise capital fund, Innovation Endeavors, was lively too. It invested in start-ups like Planet Labs, which operates satellites and sells the imagery to protection and intelligence companies, and Team8, a cybersecurity firm based by former Israeli intelligence members.

At the 2016 World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Mr. Carter requested Mr. Schmidt to fulfill. He had a proposal: Could Mr. Schmidt lead the Defense Innovation Board, a civilian advisory group tasked with bringing new technology to the Pentagon?

“We were in one of these dumpy hotels, and there he is with his small entourage walking in, and he basically said to me, ‘This is what I want to do. You’d be the perfect person to be chairman,’” Mr. Schmidt said.

Mr. Schmidt said he turned down the function as a result of he was busy and had no military background. But Mr. Carter argued that Mr. Schmidt’s tech experience was wanted, because the U.S. military — which had as soon as been a middle of innovation — was falling behind companies like Google and Facebook in software and A.I.

Mr. Schmidt finally agreed. (Mr. Carter didn’t reply to requests for remark.)

As head of the Defense Innovation Board, Mr. Schmidt started touring navy bases, plane carriers and plutonium strongholds. The journeys, which took Mr. Schmidt to about 100 bases in locations like Fayetteville, N.C., and Osan, South Korea, have been a definite break from his well-heeled life in Silicon Valley.

“You want to see these things,” Mr. Schmidt stated. “I received the nuclear missile tour. Things which are exhausting. I received a tour of Cheyenne Mountain so I might perceive what their actuality was.”

One of the primary journeys was to Tampa to go to General Thomas, who is named Tony, the place Mr. Schmidt saw maps and reside video feeds displayed on huge screens. “Eric’s observation was that a huge part of what the military does is it sits and watches,” stated Josh Marcuse, the then executive director of the Defense Innovation Board who was on the journey.

The visits made tangible what Mr. Carter had told Mr. Schmidt about how the military was lagging in technology. Mr. Schmidt quickly made ideas to vary that.

Some of his concepts have been impractical. Eric Rosenbach, then the chief of workers to Mr. Carter, recalled Mr. Schmidt as soon as telling him that the Pentagon can be higher off if it employed nobody however engineers for a year.

Others have been helpful. At an Air Force facility in Qatar in 2016, Mr. Schmidt visited officers who scheduled flight paths for the tankers that refueled planes. They used a white board and dry-erase markers to set the schedule, taking eight hours to finish the duty.

Mr. Schmidt stated he recalled considering, “Really? This is how you run the air war?” Afterward, he and others on the Defense Department labored with the tech company Pivotal to ship software to the officers.

On one other journey to a navy base in South Korea in 2017, an intelligence analyst complained to Mr. Schmidt that the software program he used to evaluate surveillance movies from North Korea was clunky.

“Let me guess,” Mr. Schmidt said, according to a Defense Department aide who traveled with him. “You don’t have the flexibility to change that.”

In December 2017, Mr. Schmidt stepped down as Google’s chairman however remained on the board. He said he was seeking a brand new chapter.

“If I stayed as chairman, then next year would have been the same as the previous year, and I wanted a change of emphasis,” said Mr. Schmidt. “As chairman of Google, what I did is I ran around and gave speeches, and went to Brussels and all the things that Google still does today. It’s much better to work on these new things for me.”

Google declined to comment on Mr. Schmidt’s departure as chairman.

By then, Mr. Schmidt’s ties to Google had induced issues in his protection work. In 2016, Roma Laster, a Defense Department worker, filed a complaint on the company elevating considerations about Mr. Schmidt and conflicts of curiosity, Mr. Marcuse stated.

In the complaint, earlier reported by ProPublica, Ms. Laster, who labored with the Defense Innovation Board, said Mr. Schmidt had requested a service member what cloud computing providers their unit used and whether or not they had thought-about options. She stated Mr. Schmidt confronted a battle of interest as a result of he worked for Google, which additionally gives cloud services.

Mr. Marcuse, who now works at Google, said Mr. Schmidt was “scrupulous and diligent” in avoiding conflicts. Mr. Schmidt said he adopted the principles forbidding conflicts of interest. Ms. Laster didn’t reply to requests for remark.

Mr. Schmidt quickly received caught up in one other situation between Google and the military. Google had signed a contract in 2017 to assist the Pentagon to construct methods to automatically analyze drone footage to identify particular objects like buildings, vehicles, and people.

Mr. Schmidt was a proponent of the hassle, known as Project Maven. He stated he inspired the Pentagon to pursue it and testified in Congress in regards to the undertaking’s deserves, however was not concerned within the company’s selection of Google.

But the effort blew up in 2018 when Google employees protested and stated they didn’t need their work to result in deadly strikes. More than 3,000 staff signed a letter to Mr. Pichai, saying the contract would undermine the general public’s belief within the firm.

It was a black eye for Mr. Schmidt. Military officers, who stated Project Maven was not getting used for deadly missions, condemned Google for abandoning the contract. Google staff additionally criticized Mr. Schmidt’s ties to the Pentagon.

“He has very different goals and values than the engineers at his company,” stated Jack Poulson, a Google worker who protested Mr. Schmidt’s military work and who has since left the company.

Mr. Schmidt said he sidestepped discussions about Project Maven as a result of of conflict-of-interest guidelines, however wished he might have weighed in. “I would have certainly had an opinion,” he stated.

Last April, Mr. Schmidt announced he deliberate to go away Google’s board. He had helped create an A.I. middle backed by the Pentagon in 2018 and had additionally turn into co-chair of the National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence, a brand new group advising Congress on developing A.I. for defense.

A month after leaving Google, Mr. Schmidt invested in Rebellion Defense, a software program start-up based by former Defense Department staff that analyzes video gathered through drone. His enterprise agency later put more cash into the company, and Mr. Schmidt joined its board.

The funding led to extra bother. The Electronic Privacy Information Center, a nonprofit privateness and civil liberties group, sued the A.I. commission last September for failing to show over data. EPIC said the group was stacked with industry executives like Mr. Schmidt and others from Microsoft, Amazon and Oracle, who could potentially sway the government in favor of their companies’ interests.

Mr. Schmidt was underneath scrutiny as a result of of Rebellion Defense and the way he might push the government to make use of the start-up’s services, EPIC said.

“We don’t have any public disclosure about what information Eric has provided to the commission about his business interests,” said John Davisson, a legal professional at EPIC.

In December, a district court dominated the A.I. fee should disclose the data requested by EPIC. The fee has launched a whole lot of pages of paperwork, most of which don’t contain Mr. Schmidt or his companies. EPIC stated extra data are set to be launched.

Chris Lynch, the chief executive of Rebellion Defense, said Mr. Schmidt suggested the company solely on hiring and growth. Mr. Schmidt said he didn’t advocate for the Defense Department to purchase technology from the start-up.

He has continued plowing forward. In November, he unveiled a $1 billion dedication by means of Schmidt Futures, the philanthropic agency that he runs along with his spouse, Wendy, to fund education for those who want to work in public service.