Beholder
Senior Member
Most tech startups don't care about making a profit while using investors to unfairly push out competitors from the market at a loss. As soon as they stop growing, they cut staff and add fees (Twitter/X) or malware (Windows 10), sending all customers running. The crappification cycle only works together with vendor lock-in, so there is plenty of incompatible things. Due to lots of companies not understanding the dangers of vendor lock-in (all customer information controlled by Facebook), they have to spend lots of money transitioning from one walled in garden to the next. Would be nice if services provided could just continue to function for as long as needed, by being honest upfront about what it actually costs to run the whole thing.
Can there be some kind of limit on investments per profit margin, without loopholes or huring growth of companies with a sustainable bussiness model? A percentage of their growth would have to be financed using real profits once a growth criteria based on staff and users has been reached. Then they have to raise prices early to break even.
Is the solution to just ban vendor lock-ins that are not essential due to real hardware patents? They might just buy bad patents to justify the lock-in.
Should people just continue the crappification cycle but screw over the investors by getting their free shit before the party is over, letting late investors (such as Elon Musk) pay for all the destruction as it burns down?
Should open standards simply be the cultural norm like the web and e-mail? Have not worked so far, because people are still sending Microsoft Office documents to companies that might not use the same software as them. Students would have to be trained in spotting the red flags before getting trapped with garbage.
* Using a cloud without user benefits (SAAS only exist to steal data and lock you in)
* Advertised but free (will cost later)
* Walled in (so that they can raise the price)
* Agressive marketing (looking for market cuts using investors, not profit)
* Cult-like peer pressure (like a pyramid scam)
* Easy to step in but impossible to step out due to complexity (Nobody decides to use Jira, but after trying it, they are stuck and can't admit their mistake)
Can there be some kind of limit on investments per profit margin, without loopholes or huring growth of companies with a sustainable bussiness model? A percentage of their growth would have to be financed using real profits once a growth criteria based on staff and users has been reached. Then they have to raise prices early to break even.
Is the solution to just ban vendor lock-ins that are not essential due to real hardware patents? They might just buy bad patents to justify the lock-in.
Should people just continue the crappification cycle but screw over the investors by getting their free shit before the party is over, letting late investors (such as Elon Musk) pay for all the destruction as it burns down?
Should open standards simply be the cultural norm like the web and e-mail? Have not worked so far, because people are still sending Microsoft Office documents to companies that might not use the same software as them. Students would have to be trained in spotting the red flags before getting trapped with garbage.
* Using a cloud without user benefits (SAAS only exist to steal data and lock you in)
* Advertised but free (will cost later)
* Walled in (so that they can raise the price)
* Agressive marketing (looking for market cuts using investors, not profit)
* Cult-like peer pressure (like a pyramid scam)
* Easy to step in but impossible to step out due to complexity (Nobody decides to use Jira, but after trying it, they are stuck and can't admit their mistake)