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jamiequint

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jamiequint
·il y a 11 jours·discuss
"What exactly is there in the USA's destruction of the economic norms that have always served it"

What destruction? US GDP growth has recovered to the pre-COVID trendline while EU lags behind it's already-slow previous pace.
jamiequint
·il y a 12 jours·discuss
"Fading superpower" is typical EU cope. It may help to be a little bit introspective about why one might want to oppose EU politics, or its leaders, whose "leadership" over the last decade has led to unprecedented migrant, economic, and energy crises, and stalling growth.
jamiequint
·il y a 14 jours·discuss
Called photography poor facsimiles of painting, not real art, etc.
jamiequint
·il y a 14 jours·discuss
Baudelaire and many others said the same thing about photography.
jamiequint
·il y a 26 jours·discuss
You're confusing law with ethics, they are not the same.
jamiequint
·il y a 2 mois·discuss
"I thought the goal was to generate tax revenue from the taxes, which wouldn't happen to the extent they end up in the hands of NYC residents."

You're right, I'm saying I think it is a good tax for reasons secondary to revenue. We all know NYC is going to squander the money, at least they might make housing slightly cheaper for the average New Yorker in the process.
jamiequint
·il y a 2 mois·discuss
"If you make the tax too high it starts discouraging the behavior you're taxing, which can paradoxically reduce overall tax revenue."

I am generally against more taxes, but the structure of this one is quite good in terms of the incentives. If wealthy people who only live in the city part-time stay in hotels instead of buying second homes, the net effect should be to increase the cost of hotel rooms and reduce the cost of owned-housing. NYC charges nearly 10% tax on hotel stays, so recoups some of the cost there. Having property in your city mostly being occupied by people who live their full time, particularly when property is already very expensive, seems like a good thing overall.
jamiequint
·il y a 2 mois·discuss
Yes, envy is a bitch.

There being more $10+ billionaires doesn't make your life worse when you are earning 50% more on a real dollar basis than you would have been 50 years ago.
jamiequint
·il y a 2 mois·discuss
And yet somehow, magically, all of these things are better than they have been ever at any point throughout human history. It's almost as if the system is working.
jamiequint
·il y a 2 mois·discuss
This is extreme cope.
jamiequint
·il y a 3 mois·discuss
I've been in Waymos that have needed teleop rescue multiple times in the last year so by that metric it's not a L4 system either.
jamiequint
·il y a 3 mois·discuss
In practice, Tesla on HW4 drives indistinguishably different from Waymo.
jamiequint
·il y a 3 mois·discuss
Anyone who thinks it is pipe dream given how it works today + rate of change is clueless, and that is putting it kindly.
jamiequint
·il y a 3 mois·discuss
Your claim was that the product doesn't work, and I'm telling you it works without intervention consistently and in complicated traffic situations.

Any argument about how people don't pay enough attention since it isn't yet certified as a L4 system is irrelevant and tangential to the point.
jamiequint
·il y a 3 mois·discuss
You said: "underwriters ... doing the same thing as the credit agencies did in 2008 by giving underwater mortgage backed securities a AAA rating"

That isn't what is happening at all.

In an IPO the underwriters and the company collaborate to set the price based on approximate demand and what they want the quality of the holders to look like.

In the roadshow, the company is very constrained as to what they can say or disclose outside of the scope of the S-1. They can't include MNPI, forward looking financial projections, etc. Underwriters are also prohibited from sharing MNPI, or publishing marketing disguised as research.

So I guess if you're saying the SpaceX S-1 is completely full of shit and there's hidden risk in it, than it could be similar to 2008, but in this case nobody is manufacturing a rating, and those material misrepresentations would constitute securities fraud. Investment banks and ratings agencies aren't the same thing at all, and the buyers of marginally profitable IPO stocks are (hopefully) different than those of AAA MBS.
jamiequint
·il y a 3 mois·discuss
It's so pipe-dreamy that I used it for an hour today through SF rush hour traffic. Clearly never going to work though, right? right???
jamiequint
·il y a 3 mois·discuss
It's not the same at all. Do you know how an IPO roadshow works at all or are you just spouting bullshit?
jamiequint
·il y a 3 mois·discuss
How would the stock be harmed by them selling better performing or more relevant ads?
jamiequint
·il y a 3 mois·discuss
In what way would that be securities fraud? I guess you could get nailed under Section 17(a), but really hard to make a case they're defrauding investors by representing they were going to make ads worse performing than they ended up making them.

In order for it to be securities fraud it has to be tied to a securities transaction and the misstatement has to be material to a reasonable investor's decision.
jamiequint
·il y a 3 mois·discuss
Single example is worthless. Is there a pattern of this happening far more often? Overall, do fewer people get incorrectly arrested or detained as a result of this technology, or more.