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Google (still too late) is pulling fake news from AdWords.
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# ? Nov 15, 2016 03:12 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 04:11 |
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Twitter's giving the firehose to the FBI, when it wouldn't do so for the CIA. http://www.theverge.com/2016/11/14/13629248/fbi-dataminr-twitter-surveillance-contract-scanning-police Just need Tim Cook to give up on privacy to ensure that all hope everywhere is dead.
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# ? Nov 15, 2016 03:19 |
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Silicon Valley built a toaster oven. You can guess how that went. https://www.fastcodesign.com/3065667/this-1500-toaster-oven-is-everything-thats-wrong-with-silicon-valley-design
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# ? Nov 16, 2016 03:14 |
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WE HAVE AN EXIT Snapchat files for it's IPO! https://techcrunch.com/2016/11/15/snapchat-has-reportedly-filed-confidentially-for-its-massive-ipo/
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# ? Nov 16, 2016 04:28 |
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unknown posted:WE HAVE AN EXIT I'm so pumped for the stock value to plummet after 3 months.
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# ? Nov 16, 2016 06:29 |
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Dr. Fishopolis posted:I'm not sure what your implication is here. No reasonable person thinks that regulating AirBnB will solve anyone's housing crisis.
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# ? Nov 16, 2016 10:52 |
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I see they are staking their business on those spy glasses? Didn't exactly work for Google..
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# ? Nov 16, 2016 14:21 |
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Earlier in this thread, I made a prediction partially in jest, which ended up becoming true. Prophesy: silence_kit posted:I sincerely believe that some posters in this thread would defend to the death even the most stupid, pointless, and wasteful government regulation if it gave them an opportunity to rag on a startup company. Prophesy fulfilled: blugu64 posted:I don't understand how Beepi is legal. I almost bought a car from the, until I realized that it was Sunday, and it's against the law to sell cars as a dealership on Sunday* in Texas. Why should I buy a car from a company that flaunts the law and accepts bitcoins. I also made another prediction which has partially become true: silence_kit posted:Watch as in the next 8 years, President Trump will pass legislation increasing DoD funding, and a marginal graduate student science project which wouldn't have gotten funded in a more conservative funding climate becomes the next steam engine/radio/internet. Is The Next Great Technology, enabled by shoveling more money into science research, going to be created in the next couple of years? silence_kit fucked around with this message at 21:37 on Nov 16, 2016 |
# ? Nov 16, 2016 21:34 |
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That's really funny because the post you quote was immediately challenged and the poster declined to defend the law at all, but said that the company should get it changed instead of ignoring it.
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# ? Nov 16, 2016 21:41 |
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Eletriarnation posted:That's really funny because the post you quote was immediately challenged and the poster declined to defend the law at all, but said that the company should get it changed instead of ignoring it. lol you're completely right: blugu64 posted:Then change the law, what other laws do you think are weird and stupid and thus think you don't have to follow?
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# ? Nov 16, 2016 22:02 |
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silence_kit posted:Is The Next Great Technology, enabled by shoveling more money into science research, going to be created in the next couple of years? NSF funding, EPA research funding, DOE non-weapons funding, NASA earth science funding, NIH and NIMH funding are all likely to be significantly cut. Where do you get this idea we are shoving more money into science research?
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# ? Nov 16, 2016 22:05 |
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The only DoD spending he's proposing is buying more useless/overpriced weapon systems from LockMart as a sop to "manufacturing" jobs, i.e. the same kind of pork barrel policies we already have. It's unlikely to produce more R&D, especially as he's promising to slash a lot of other agencies that fund essential science research.
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# ? Nov 16, 2016 22:53 |
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silence_kit posted:Earlier in this thread, I made a prediction partially in jest, which ended up becoming true. Congrats, have a cookie, you earned it.
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# ? Nov 16, 2016 23:16 |
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Story of a perhaps-nepotism-hire whistleblower at Theranos. It's oddly abstract and indirect but still kind of interesting. http://www.wsj.com/articles/theranos-whistleblower-shook-the-companyand-his-family-1479335963
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# ? Nov 17, 2016 01:26 |
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Can you summarize? WSJ is paywalled.
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# ? Nov 17, 2016 03:19 |
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Baby Babbeh posted:The only DoD spending he's proposing is buying more useless/overpriced weapon systems from LockMart as a sop to "manufacturing" jobs, i.e. the same kind of pork barrel policies we already have. It's unlikely to produce more R&D, especially as he's promising to slash a lot of other agencies that fund essential science research. Yeah, I'm a researcher doing aerospace related stuff at a Government lab; my experience is that while defense projects are great for research initially, once they through concept, requirements, prototyping, and initial acceptance testing, the money starts to run dry in the R&D departments. As intial production ramps up and big programs run over time, over budget, and start to be threatened by Congress, Generals start to look for money in the couch cushions to keep things going and R&D takes a big hit. Right now, we have the Air Force spending a lot to build the F-35 and the new LRS-B/B-21. Navy is spending big to build F-35 and the new Ford class carriers. And the Army is trying to figure how they can fund both FVL and upgrade programs for the Blackhawk and Apache. The military has a lot of procurement coming up, and R&D is getting cut back to find money to pay for it.
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# ? Nov 17, 2016 03:39 |
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If we were to kill the F 35 and spend that money on literally anything else at all, that would not only benefit the country but would actually probably increase the combat readiness of our military because they wouldn't be saddled with flying the worst plane ever designed in an era where fighter jets are kind of pointless for the sort of conflict we're likely to face. But all the parts are built by politically empowered white people in economically depressed parts of the country and defense spending is the only kind of stimulus that's thinkable under our ideology, so it will never, ever happen.
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# ? Nov 17, 2016 05:03 |
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silence_kit posted:Earlier in this thread, I made a prediction partially in jest, which ended up becoming true. You already bragged about "predicting" it here, on the day it was posted, August 1st 2016: silence_kit posted:Lol, I made a prediction earlier in this thread and at the time I thought it was a little hyperbolic, but it looks like it actually came true: Why are you bringing it up again? E: Let me edit past the rhetorical question. Your attempt to paint this thread's occupants as hypocrites is boring and wrong. Boot and Rally fucked around with this message at 05:16 on Nov 17, 2016 |
# ? Nov 17, 2016 05:14 |
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Arsenic Lupin posted:Can you summarize? WSJ is paywalled. -George Shultz (95, secretary of state under Reagan) was on the Theranos board -His grandson, Tyler Shultz, was also at Theranos for like 8 months and then wrote an email to Holmes in 2014 saying "hey they're doctoring the data down here". -Holmes and the company president replied that he was an idiot who didn't understand science, and he quit that day -Tyler spoke to the state regulator and a journalist and was a main source for the first wave of bad Theranos publicity in October 2015 -This part is unclear but supposedly he spent $400k defending himself legally from the company, and his grandfather with the company has tried to get him to sign nondisclosure stuff A lot of critical things are out of the story because Shultz isn't quoted directly... like in that email was he being pointed towards Holmes or was he thinking she wasn't aware? It's all a little hazy.
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# ? Nov 17, 2016 05:20 |
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Hey, this can't go poorly at all, right? https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/complete-rethinking-how-work-should-john-battelle?trk=hp-feed-article-title quote:Stephen DeWitt has had the kind of career that used to end with a gold watch, a comfortable retirement, and a slow decline into old age. He’s held senior positions at HP, Cisco, and Symantec, and took Cobalt Networks through one of the highest flying IPOs of the late 1990s. But instead of retiring, in early 2015 he took the position of CEO at Work Market, a fast-growing platform that is reimagining the relationship between labor and business. The gig economy cannot fail, it can only be failed.
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# ? Nov 18, 2016 02:58 |
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so they've invented... temping
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# ? Nov 18, 2016 03:00 |
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rethinking reimagining enterprise of one I like how basically tech companies are just glorified hype machines. Just add re- to a few words and you're good to go.
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# ? Nov 18, 2016 03:19 |
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Liquid Communism posted:The gig economy cannot fail, it can only be failed. Also, IBM had systems for breaking projects down and aligning folks in their talent pools a decade ago. If they hadn't faceplanted that might've come sooner.
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# ? Nov 18, 2016 03:26 |
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JawnV6 posted:I never understood what cachet "legendary investor" is supposed to carry. They lucked out once, most likely not due to any inherent understanding of the market or skill, and after a good exit have more money to put on stupider/riskier bets. It's like there's this Platonic ideal of a legendary investor that doesn't actually exist but everyone thinks of it when the phrase comes up.
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# ? Nov 18, 2016 04:46 |
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Warren Buffet's personality cult annoys me to no end
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# ? Nov 18, 2016 05:27 |
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DACK FAYDEN posted:I honestly think some of that cachet comes from Warren Buffet existing. He's the only one I know of that has had multiple successes to the point where I genuinely think he is the best living investor. it was just luck, he's hosed up a shitload
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# ? Nov 18, 2016 05:41 |
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"parameterizes tasks and workflows against any number of data points and business rules" Good to see the guys who wrote LaForge's lines for Star Trek are getting work. Peanut President fucked around with this message at 06:31 on Nov 18, 2016 |
# ? Nov 18, 2016 06:28 |
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DACK FAYDEN posted:It's like there's this Platonic ideal of a legendary investor that doesn't actually exist but everyone thinks of it when the phrase comes up. The market is uncertain and scary so there is comfort in the belief that there are prophets who can guide us to the promised land of above 8% annual yields.
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# ? Nov 18, 2016 07:36 |
It's worse than just temp work. Temp work comes with rights as an employee. You sign up as a freelancer. Since they aren't directly hiring you they aren't on the hook for your benefits and neither are the companies that are hiring you.
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# ? Nov 18, 2016 11:54 |
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JawnV6 posted:I never understood what cachet "legendary investor" is supposed to carry. They lucked out once, most likely not due to any inherent understanding of the market or skill, and after a good exit have more money to put on stupider/riskier bets. That's not an uncommon case, but Fred Wilson is legit. E: also, VCs don't invest the exit proceeds, except in small recycling cases, unless you count them coming back via enriched LPs.
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# ? Nov 18, 2016 13:31 |
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RandomPauI posted:It's worse than just temp work. Temp work comes with rights as an employee. You sign up as a freelancer. Since they aren't directly hiring you they aren't on the hook for your benefits and neither are the companies that are hiring you.
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# ? Nov 18, 2016 13:50 |
I think there's a stronger case that the gig economy increased because of bad employment prospects. Wages have been stagnant since the 1980s. The notion of a company being loyal to its employees died out sometime in the 90s. The burden of training has fallen on prospective employees who take on a lot of debt or perform a lot of unpaid work to demonstrate their ability to perform basic tasks. Heck, the phrase permalance was coined in 2007 when Bush was still in office.
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# ? Nov 18, 2016 14:23 |
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Are we pretending cell phones had nothing to do with the gig economy? You can't have uber without cell phones. Maybe you could approximate a worse version without smart phones but uber without cell phones doesn't work.
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# ? Nov 18, 2016 14:32 |
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RandomPauI posted:I think there's a stronger case that the gig economy increased because of bad employment prospects. Wages have been stagnant since the 1980s. The notion of a company being loyal to its employees died out sometime in the 90s. The burden of training has fallen on prospective employees who take on a lot of debt or perform a lot of unpaid work to demonstrate their ability to perform basic tasks. Heck, the phrase permalance was coined in 2007 when Bush was still in office.
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# ? Nov 18, 2016 14:38 |
I'm not saying cell phones don't play a part in the gig economy. It'd be hard to have the current gig economy without cell phones. But a gig economy depends on having a lot of people having free time for intermittent work and a willingness to work for less money and benefits than people employed to work in their field full time. This implies people turning to the gig economy out of necessity either because their primary job(s) don't pay enough to meet the person's real or perceived needs. Assuming the gigs aren't their full-time jobs. Edit: FlamingLiberal posted:Yes it's a combination of factors, but prior to Obamacare a lot of people stayed in jobs they didn't necessarily like because otherwise it was basically impossible to get healthcare coverage. I'm sure that was a factor for some people but in general why trade a job with a schedule and benefits for a job where you hope to get work and where you pay for everything out of pocket and where your expenses will almost certainly increase faster than your earnings? RandomPauI fucked around with this message at 14:47 on Nov 18, 2016 |
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# ? Nov 18, 2016 14:44 |
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Without Obamacare, health insurance is literally impossible to get for a lot of the self-employed, even if you are making good money. I went to a presentation a couple of days ago about a scheme for freelancers to get health care without Obamacare and it really was a torturous system - you had to be "technically hired" by a company that did payroll so you could hire yourself on minimum wage. Or something. It didn't make a lick of sense but I'll probably have to figure it out in a year.
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# ? Nov 18, 2016 17:44 |
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boner confessor posted:so they've invented... temping
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# ? Nov 18, 2016 18:23 |
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NewForumSoftware posted:it was just luck, he's hosed up a shitload
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# ? Nov 18, 2016 18:33 |
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BarbarianElephant posted:Without Obamacare, health insurance is literally impossible to get for a lot of the self-employed, even if you are making good money. I went to a presentation a couple of days ago about a scheme for freelancers to get health care without Obamacare and it really was a torturous system - you had to be "technically hired" by a company that did payroll so you could hire yourself on minimum wage. Or something. It didn't make a lick of sense but I'll probably have to figure it out in a year. That sounds like a California thing - a PEO. I've never had problems getting healthcare when I've been self employed (pre Obamacare). The only lovely parts were the bills.
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# ? Nov 18, 2016 18:41 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 04:11 |
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Motronic posted:That sounds like a California thing - a PEO. I've never had problems getting healthcare when I've been self employed (pre Obamacare). The only lovely parts were the bills. This is a problem I've had in both Massachusetts and New York. Even when it was possible to purchase individual plans, the premiums started at $800/month. Obamacare was a major factor in me being able to start my own business, and if it goes away before I can expand enough to enroll in a group plan, I'm not sure what the future looks like.
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# ? Nov 18, 2016 22:28 |