David Graeber, the author of the book Bullshit Jobs, walked out of the room twice when Dutch newspaper de Volkskrant confronted him with pitfalls in his reasoning.
Most surprising thing about this article: Diane von Furstenberg, fashion designer and wife of billionaire media entrepreneur Barry Diller, was a proofreader.
The author does write about GE's business problems. GE capital, as mentioned above. And the Alstom acquisition, which was a too expensive bet on the wrong horse.
In march of 2016, Asana also raised $50 million. Sam Altman led that round, at a valuation of $550 million. Crunchbase wrongfully states that YC led it.
If Sam Altman's investment exits add such amounts to his bank reserve that the reserve gets bigger than $10 million, he spends the surplus above that $10 million on 'improving humanity,' which I read as charity. (1)
It's also badly written, with many me's an I's, like
'I squint at the plant names that have been rendered into Dutch.'
and uninteresting facts about the appearance of the scientist, like:
'Meis is a big man, almost a foot taller than me, broad-shouldered and bullet-headed with an exuberant laugh. Eyeing the boxes, though, he looks solemn.'
YC has funded approximately 1,900 companies. 93 are valued at $100 million or more. 19 are valued at $1 billion or more. Stripped from nuance, one could say that if you get accepted into YC, you have a 5 percent chance of building a $100 million company, and a 1 percent chance of building a $1 billion company. That's impressive.
Afaik, YC is the only seed funder-startup accelerator in the world, among thousands of other ones, that has given birth to companies worth $1 billion ore more.
At least until three years ago, it hasn't passed funding on a single billion dollar company (1).
Also, rumours are that Coinbase is raising money at a valuation of $8 billion (2). This is the same valuation that the company supposedly gave itself when it acquired earn.com in april this year (3).
With a post money valuation of 14.6 billion dollar, Cruise surpasses Dropbox as the third most valuable company that YC has invested in. The valuation of Airbnb is 31 billion, Stripe 20 billion, Cruise 14.6 billion, Dropbox 11 billion.
YC doesn't hold shares in Cruise anymore, since the company as a whole was sold to GM for 1 billion in 2016. After the acquisition, GM invested another 1.1 billion, Softbank Vision Fund invested 2.25 billion and now Honda invests 2.75 billion. So more than 7.1 billion dollar has been invested into Cruise. It's the best capitalised YC company. Airbnb has raised 4.4 billion, debt financing included.
Former SEC enforcement attorney John Reed Stark wrote about the complaint against Musk:
(...)
But here’s the rub. The SEC does not typically file SEC enforcement actions like the one against Musk. Indeed, a close reading of the SEC’s complaint against the celebrated billionaire finds a litany of glaring absences within the SEC’s allegations, including:
No alleged profits or other ill-gotten gain earned by Musk;
No alleged scheme conducted by Musk;
No alleged market manipulation orchestrated by Musk;
No alleged pump and dump ploy executed by Musk;
No alleged conspiracy between Musk and anyone else;
No alleged evidence of scienter or intent by Musk;
No alleged false filing or other false or inaccurate Tesla report to the SEC by Musk;
No alleged violation of any sort of required SEC “quiet period” by Musk; and
No concrete evidence of an alleged motive attested to Musk (though not required in SEC enforcement actions, motive is typically pled or implied in some way, shape or form).
You're so right about The Guardian. The opinion and political sections are full of politically correct, anti tech, anti freedom, pro SJWGLBT, anti common sense, pro decadence and anti wealth articles.
Elon Musk wrote to the Guardian that it's 'the most insufferable newspaper in the world'.
Some valuation context, although I'm fully aware that Stripe is a private company and that many of its investors could have investing or striking privileges.
Great batch. I'm especially impressed by the hard tech companies that produce atoms.
But unfortunately, on demo day 1 there was a company that makes the world uglier and is supporting the massive ongoing trend of middle class and sometimes even upper class people imitating an aspect of the underclass.
On demo day 2, there was a shamelessly partisan company that makes the world worse. It wants to get more people to support a process that, contrary to entrepreneurship, brings out the worst in people who actively engage in that process.
May the companies from the S18 batch flourish, except those two.
David Graeber doesn't even acknowledge that most bullshit jobs are in governments. The man is really an intellectual: he lacks common sense. Also, when Dutch newspaper de Volkskrant confronted him with other pitfalls in his reasoning, he walked out of the room twice.
https://www.volkskrant.nl/columns-opinie/-er-is-een-ongeloof...