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PMan74 | 4 years ago
(And there's no judgement in that, if you make a living selling fridge freezers it doesn't mean you have to care much about fridge freezers)
PMan74 | 4 years ago
(And there's no judgement in that, if you make a living selling fridge freezers it doesn't mean you have to care much about fridge freezers)
deckard1|4 years ago
But then you have Theranos and WeWork and all of that late '90s dot-com crap. Most of those companies had nothing to do with tech, but still raked in lots of VC money hoping to sucker people into purchasing their worthless stock after their inflated IPOs.
Of course, it has to be mentioned that the line between fraud and value gets incredibly fuzzy in tech. So much tech is "solutionized" into products that solve problems that are nonsense to begin with. Everyone believes they need cloud-this, or managed K8S, or auto-scaling whatever. The whole industry looks like a fraud at times. Especially enterprise marketing and sales. IBM, Oracle, and others have made a racket on this. And yes they have actual products with actual features, what they are selling are dreams and fairy tales. Look closely at crypto and you'll see the same cottage industry around it today. I mean, what is NFT other than credit default swaps (CDS) for the art market? It's abstracted ownership ("ownership" with a huge asterisk next to it). You even have initial coin offerings (ICO). Every thing from the dot-com and 2008 financial engineering crisis have all been replicated in crypto.
alisonkisk|4 years ago
Theranos was trying to make and sell a real product but the product didn't work so they lied and cheated to cover that up because they had nothing else to offer.
Every business is dreams and fairytales because extra sizzle gets more customers
It's different from cryptocurrencies which are pure scam plays from the start.
encryptluks2|4 years ago
matheusmoreira|4 years ago
What is wrong with this? Of course people who believed in cryptocurrencies since the beginning have seen greater returns compared to people who started investing now.
Every investment disproportionally rewards early adopters. Stocks, even simple savings accounts.