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Comment Re:*headscratch* (Score 1) 58

but the engineers and sales people would be much better off if the company were acquired.

No, that is your assumption and on you to prove. My argument is in an acquisition many of those will be laid off in short order for "efficiency" reasons and there is precedent for that particularly in filings where consolidation of resources is presented a reason for merger particularly when the other company is struggling. Also part of my proposal is that not allowing mergers will create more competition so those people can get more jobs. If good companies with bad luck deserve to be aquired then how can you argue good employees in bad companies wont get hired again? This is contradictory.

VMware is a great example of that -- it was still the world's best virtualization solution but had been completely eaten from the toes up by free competing solutions.

This example contradicts itself.

it's not even that the company was "dying" just that they ended up in a place that the business could not continue on its current path.

This also does. Unable to make debt is a prime example of how companies die. You took on debt because you were not making money. Profitable companies can get lifelines because they make profit and can tend to show they can continue growth.

Now yes I completely agree that acquiring newer companies is a problem for innovation. Look at Figma -- Adobe tried to buy and kill the product. Because antitrust regulators said no, Figma was not acquired and now they are a colossus of innovation.

*European* regulators to be clear. Sounds like you agree with me. See my thing is I think your latter example, the Figma example is in the 80/20 rule. The vast majority of MA is for this reason the vast minority is for your former reason, the altruistic "they're really good but just couldn't sell their idea". I am very willing to sacrifice the much smaller and much less consequention minority to stop the far more harmful majority.

If an IPO is harder than an acquisition (of course it is), then the acquisition happens.

Well then as part of my plan I would make it easier for companies to go IPO, bingo. What's next?

Comment Re:The water cycle is a closed system. (Score 4, Informative) 60

It is not possible to "run out."

It is, however, *very* possible to neglect to build infrastructure to collect enough water from the environment to meet your specific needs.

You got it wrong. What they did is pump the aquifers dry and that caused the land to collapse. As a result, the natural storage of water in the land can no longer happen. They destroyed naturally occurring water infrastructure by pumping out all the water they could. This was an easily avoidable issue and they were warned this was happening and yet they did nothing.

Comment Not climate change. (Score 4, Informative) 60

Since at least 2008, scientists have warned that unchecked groundwater pumping for the city and for agriculture was rapidly draining the country’s aquifers. The overuse did not just deplete underground reserves—it destroyed them, as the land compressed and sank irreversibly. One recent study found that Iran’s central plateau, where most of the country’s aquifers are located, is sinking by more than 35 centimeters each year. As a result, the aquifers lose about 1.7 billion cubic meters of water annually as the ground is permanently crushed, leaving no space for underground water storage to recover, says Darío Solano, a geoscientist at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, who was not involved with the study.

“We saw this coming,” Solano says.

Climate change did zero percent of the damage. Instead, what has occurred is 100% the result of idiocy. So yes, it has something in common with climate change but it's not the same thing at all.

Comment I hope you're embarrassed. (Score 2) 33

This is a specification for UNIX. ....

Wrong. Neither Linux nor UNIX are mentioned in the specification. However, it should be noted that the specification is hosted on Freedesktop.org which clearly states on their site that...

Freedesktop.org is a project to work on interoperability and shared base technology for free-software desktop environments for the X Window System (X11) and Wayland on Linux and other Unix-like operating systems.

They do mention Linux and Unix-like operating systems being target operating system. However, there is no mention of UNIX systems specifically. Additionally, nobody claimed it was exclusively Linux, only that it would impact Linux users.

Honestly, if I were you, I would be dreadfully embarrassed for making such a boisterous pronouncement only to be shown to be a obnoxious fool.

Comment What should really be of interest here (Score 1) 41

What should be of interest to slashdotters isn't the irony of someone associated with cryptography losing their private key, but that there exists an open source system to securely allow voting and also to absolutely verify that the vote was counted. All while still maintaining anonymity. Barring the issue of losing private keys on the part of those administering the vote, this sort of system is very interesting, and really could be used to promote voter engagement and democracy. I had heard of it before, but kind of forgot about it.

Comment Re: You know you could Google (Score 1) 40

Same with wolves where the whole idea of the "alpha" was a misunderstanding from one guy who even went back and corrected the observation since he initially made it watching captive animals, in the wild they're just families, the "leadership" observed was parents to children not the big dog in charge.

Comment Re:problem is (Score 1) 58

If a company goes under them yeah another company can come along and buy their assets sure but a dying company isn't really competing or innovating is it? Companies go under all the time, the success rate in America is like 30% of all businesses and less for some areas.

Aquisitions have just been plainly anti consumer and anti worker in their outcomes; folks get laid off, prices go up, products get worse or just shelved entirely so the parent just catch and kills.

  Let companies grow and compete if two companies want to cooperate they can but no more buying up your competition.

Comment Re:Wanna stop layoffs? (Score 1) 58

This is true, a comment below here mentions at large companies like this that engineers don't innovate and a good case in point is Adobe.

Magento, Permia, Marketo, Allegorithmic, Workfront and if it wasn't for the EU they would have gone ahead and just bought Figma, an actual competitor that did something actual innovative. Once companies are big enough innovation is just buying your competition, particularly if you can get them before they can actually compete with you.

I've said it before but I am in favor of just stopping any and all acquisitions, at least for a 10 year timespan if not 20 or 30 years because IMO none of the aquisitions have done anything positive for the consumer or the employees. Think about any medium or large acquisition in the past 20 years, which have been positive to where the outcome of being purchased was better than letting these companies grow on their own?

Comment Re: Other Non-Evidence-Based claims (Score 1) 302

1) "give me liberty or give me death" was always a minority position.
2) Things that work well when people live in rural areas with slow communication don't necessarily work well when people live in dense clusters (i.e. cities) and conversely.
3) It is always the job of the individual to assign weights to his Bayesian priors. The state may control the costs of your actions, but should not be allowed to control your beliefs.

I hope I've covered what you were asking, but it was a bit unclear.

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