John Griffin (businessman)

John Patrick Griffin (born 1 August 1942) is a British businessman. He is the founder of Addison Lee taxi and courier company.

John Griffin
Born
John Patrick Griffin

(1942-08-01) 1 August 1942
NationalityBritish
EducationFinchley Catholic High School
OccupationBusinessman
Known forFounder of Addison Lee
Net worth£140 million (2014)[1]
Children2, including Liam Griffin

Early life

John Patrick Griffin[2] was born on 1 August 1942[1] in the UK to a civil engineering contractor father. He was raised in Kilburn from 9 years old attending Finchley Catholic High School. However, he left school with no qualifications after contracting tuberculosis from drinking the milk of a cow he had milked on a school visit to a farm.[3]

Career

While Griffin was training as an accountant, his father's road and sewer building business got into financial difficulty.[4] Griffin left accountancy training to help salvage the business, with some success.[5] During this period, and wanting a flexible job to create extra income, Griffin started working as a minicab driver which turned into a full-time job.

Griffin eventually decided to move on from driving minicabs, deciding he could do a better job of running a minicab business. Together with another driver, he set about starting a company which today is known as West One Cars. However, Griffin was convinced to stay on with his original employer after his salary was quadrupled and only later decided to form his own company.[3]

Griffin was convinced that his new company needed a name which started with an "A" for it to appear early in telephone directory listings. A colleague who lived in a squat in Addison Gardens said people seemed to think this was a very posh address, which Griffin supplemented with Lee. Addison Lee was founded in 1975, with half the company owned by investor Lenny Foster.[5]

In 1976, Griffin founded the Private Hire Car Association in response to the Miscellaneous Provisions Act 1976. As chairman of the association, Griffin was vocal in the debate that led to the licensing of private hire operators in the UK.[5]

He appeared on the television programme, The Secret Millionaire in December 2009.[4]

He stepped down as chairman of Addison Lee in 2014, shortly after private equity firm Carlyle Group purchased a majority stake in the company in a deal worth £300 million.[6]

Political affiliations

He is one of the top 20 donors to the Conservative Party.[7]

Philanthropy

He is an "Enterprise Fellow" of The Prince's Trust.[8] He has also made charitable contributions to the Variety Club Golf Society.[4]

Personal life

He resides in Potters Bar, Hertfordshire, north of London, with his partner, Rita.[4] He has two sons, Liam and Kieran, who both work for Addison Lee.[4]

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gollark: > There is burgeoning interest in designing AI-basedsystems to assist humans in designing computing systems,including tools that automatically generate computer code.The most notable of these comes in the form of the first self-described ‘AI pair programmer’, GitHub Copilot, a languagemodel trained over open-source GitHub code. However, codeoften contains bugs—and so, given the vast quantity of unvettedcode that Copilot has processed, it is certain that the languagemodel will have learned from exploitable, buggy code. Thisraises concerns on the security of Copilot’s code contributions.In this work, we systematically investigate the prevalence andconditions that can cause GitHub Copilot to recommend insecurecode. To perform this analysis we prompt Copilot to generatecode in scenarios relevant to high-risk CWEs (e.g. those fromMITRE’s “Top 25” list). We explore Copilot’s performance onthree distinct code generation axes—examining how it performsgiven diversity of weaknesses, diversity of prompts, and diversityof domains. In total, we produce 89 different scenarios forCopilot to complete, producing 1,692 programs. Of these, wefound approximately 40 % to be vulnerable.Index Terms—Cybersecurity, AI, code generation, CWE

References

  1. "Accountancy Rich List: 50-30". Economia. Retrieved 7 February 2015.
  2. "John Patrick Griffin with CIFD Presents". Roundhouse. Retrieved 7 February 2015.
  3. Teather, David (2009-12-20). "Minicab mogul has tight grip on wheel". London: The Guardian. Archived from the original on 23 December 2009. Retrieved 2009-12-24.
  4. My first million: John Griffin, The Financial Times, July 7, 2011
  5. "John Griffin". Addison Lee. Retrieved August 15, 2010.
  6. Scott Campbell, Addison Lee chairman John Griffin steps down, The Daily Telegraph, 19 May 2014
  7. Elizabeth Rigby, Gavin Jackson, George Parker, 'Tories double number of big City donors in five years: Miliband attacks 'party of Mayfair hedge funds and Monaco tax avoiders',' The Financial Times, 5 February 2015, p. 1
  8. The Prince's Trust: John Griffin: Founder and Chairman, Addison Lee
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