VINCENT C. LOBUE LEGAL
babm.com/legal
Vincent C. LoBue is an associate attorney with the firm practicing in consumer protection litigation, foreclosures, bankruptcy, debt management, and general litigation. Vince received his law degree from Stetson University College of Law in Gulfport, Florida.
vince@yesnerboss.com
22 | NOV/DEC 2011
ON THE SHOULDERS OF A GIANT
Just this month the world lost a titan of industry with the sad passing of Apple’s CEO, Steve Jobs. In him we lost a modern day Leonardo da Vinci, an inventor and innovator, whose imagination shaped our collective reality forever. I am a recent owner of my first smart phone and Apple product, an iPhone. I was thrilled at how quickly and seamlessly this device allowed me to combine almost every facet of my personal and professional life, my movies, my music, my pictures, my sports, my calendar, my email, my friends, my family, into one central location – my access to me.
What I find unique about the machine born of Jobs’ genius is frankly the personal connection that I feel for my iPhone. No other machine elicits the same reaction from the user, with the closest exception being some people’s affinity for their car. And the same observation can be made of other smart phones, too. Just ask any habitual Blackberry user.
So why such an intimate connection to an inanimate telephone? Simply, it is more than a phone. The smart phone is a gateway into every aspect of an individual’s private and professional life. As Steve Jobs was able to imagine, smart phones give us access to our entire lives including family, friends, our jobs, personal finances, social networks, hobbies and entertainment. This is the new smart phone reality and in tribute to Steve Jobs, the giant on whose shoulders we now stand, I will refer to this new paradigm as the iPhone age.
debtor’s rights in the age of the iPhone
DEBT COLLECTION PRACTICES IN THE IPHONE AGE
As our economy continues to face the long-term impacts of the economic crisis triggered during the summer of 2008, nearly every individual from consumers to the small business owners are faced with making difficult financial decisions. In Florida we continue to face unemployment and foreclosure rates that rival the highest in the nation. Many consumers and small business owners who have never faced these new financial difficulties find themselves in unfamiliar waters, where it is easy to lose sight of the free market realities.
The debtor-creditor relationship is like any other free market transaction – it assumes that the participants are acting rationally of their own free will. In practice the debtor-creditor relationship is usually composed of a person or small business owner as the debtor and a large corporation as the creditor. Most creditors utilize automated dialing equipment and computer aided calling systems to collect on past due debt. The autonomous assault by the creditor’s computer on a smart phone increases the chance that the debtor will act irrationally and make a poor decision favoring the creditor.
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