That the insurance company feels comfortable nobody will punish them for stealing your money. Their business model is who can they get away with not helping really.
If they are stealing, they aren't doing it very well! Insurance companies tend to only have profit margins around ~5%.
And what does that mean about insurance buyers? Are they all idiots for buying insurance, since it just means their money will get stolen?
Insurance companies can't afford to pay out any more than they need to; doing so would raise premiums for all customers and make their products less appealing in a fairly competitive industry.
Whether NotPetya was an "act of war" (a legal term of art), is a legitimately interesting discussion! To have it reduced to "those insurance companies are stealing" is depressingly simplistic.
That ~5% worked out to almost 4 billion profit last year for my healthcare company. They are incentivized to decline coverage as much as they possibly can and have a long history showing they want to.
The DMHC randomly selected 90 instances where Anthem Blue
Cross canceled the insurance of policy holders who had
been diagnosed with costly or life-threatening illnesses,
to find how many of these cancellations were legal. The
agency concluded that all these cancellations were
illegal.
Falling on "it was an act of war" when no government has declared such a war is nothing more than creative accounting. (this is also Anthem)
On 17 March 2010, WellPoint announced it was reclassifying
some of its administrative costs as medical care costs in
order to meet new loss ratio requirements under the health
care law, which requires insurers to spend at least 80% or
85% of customer premiums on health care services,
depending on the type of plan.[5
Yes, they are profit making companies. Those profits are distributed to investors, in the case of Anthem, that's mostly institutional investors, i.e. people's retirement funds. What's your point?
Anthem's 4% margins are well below the S&P 500 average of 11%. If Anthem was simply stealing surely their margins would be a little higher? And who are the idiots buying Anthem insurance? I mean, if it was just stealing, everyone would take their money somewhere else, no?
Of course the truth is not simple, but rather complex. Most any company has a "Controversies" section on their wikipedia page. Toyota once shipped a car with bad brakes. What does it mean? Are all companies simply stealing?
Yes, insurance companies are incentivized to decline coverage, so that they can lower premiums (to compete) and increase margins. But they are also incentivized to payout because if they don't, people stop buying insurance.
> Falling on "it was an act of war" when no government has declared such a war is nothing more than creative accounting. (this is also Anthem)
Quite certain that is not how the courts will interpret the term "act of war." In international law, for example, there is certainly no precedent that a government declaration of war is required for an act to be considered an act of war. Any aggressive act can potentially be considered an act of war.
If Russia decided to blow up a bunch of US freighters, sans-declaration of war, fairly certain the act could pass as an act of war.
If California had investigated 100 of Anthem's paying customers' cancelled policies at random, instead of 90, and found 100 were illegally cancelled because of the cost instead of the 90 out of 90 they found to be illegally cancelled because of the cost, would it be stealing then?
What is it if it's not stealing when you take people's money in exchange for a service but illegally close their account and keep the money they paid instead of providing the service?
In May 2014, Anthem Blue Cross refused to pay for the
hospitalization of a Sonoma County, California man for
stage four cancers, although he had paid Anthem over
$100,000.00 in premiums.[61][62] Anthem ended up paying
for coverage following public outcry.[63].
1. Anthem Insurance stole from policy holders.
2. Ergo, Zurich Insurance stole from Mondelez.
If you are going to make a claim that all insurers are systematically stealing from their customers, I think you are a long way off. So Toyota sometimes ships cars with bad breaks. Ergo all car companies are trying to kill drivers?
Are health insurance companies abnormal or representative of non-health insurance companies? Zurich Insurance doesn't look better at all based on the submitted article -
specifically covered “all risks of physical loss or
damage” and “all risk of physical loss or damage to
electronic data, programs or software” due to “the
malicious introduction of a machine code or instruction.”
5% profit margin doesn't mean I will lose 5% on average. My risk will be pooled with reckless people and scammers. I know I am neither but my insurance company doesn't.
Then there are the sales and administration costs that need to be paid. On both their side (coming out of my premium) and on my side (coming out of my free time). I don't like keeping receipts and I don't like filing claim.
Actually most insurance companies pay out more money in losses than they take in via premiums.
The real business models for insurance companies isn't underwriting profits, it's arbitraging the time value of money (pay premiums now, pay claims later) via investing the float.
That's not more money though; that's less money exchanged into a weaker (more inflated) currency. Four pounds isn't more than three kilograms just because the number is larger.
In this context, "prove" means convince a judge of the Cook County court that the NotPetya ransomware was not an ordinary cyber attack, but rather a Russian act of war against the US.
I think Zurich's point of view is not untenable. If a Russian military submarine had sunk a Mondelez freighter, would it be an act of war? I think possibly. What if a Russian military cyber hacking squad steals their money with ransomware? Less clear, but still certainly a belligerent act on Russia's part.
Of course Zurich will need to present a convincing case that the cyber attack was committed by the Russian government.
I think Courts will decide on that matter. The insurance company says some govts claim that these are actions perpetrated by Russia. If courts accept it, they have to decide do these come under the scope of "acts of war". Courts will ask that insurance company to provide more than a newspaper claims. So, they will ask for evidence whether Russia indeed committed these.