OpenAI, valued at $157 billion, isn't profitable. Should that be normal? (www.salon.com)
from jeffw@lemmy.world to technology@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 03:35
https://lemmy.world/post/24444009

#technology

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JeeBaiChow@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 03:44 next collapse

Capitalism doesn’t sell performance. It sell ‘potential’ and ‘perceived gains’.

einlander@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 03:53 collapse

I sell my dates on my potential wealth and potential penis size. People need to get on the capitalism grindset.

TachyonTele@lemm.ee on 19 Jan 04:10 next collapse

“I have a great venture Idea for you Susan. What if, and hear me out, what if my penis was at least average size! I already have an investor lined up in the bedroom, you’d be crazy to pass on this opportunity”

seven_phone@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 04:13 next collapse

And women sell dates on their potential to do that thing that was discussed but then try to backtrack by pretending they thought it was a joke and didn’t even bring a banana.

ImplyingImplications@lemmy.ca on 19 Jan 06:38 next collapse

It’s what we in the biz would refer to as a “grower”, which is in contrast to a “shower”.

chonglibloodsport@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 07:00 collapse

If you’re gonna sell dates you better be a grower! Dates don’t just grow themselves!

sp3tr4l@lemmy.zip on 20 Jan 14:48 collapse

“Both my cock and my investment portfolio are well positioned to overperform both ongoing quarterly and year over year growth as compared to standard cocks and investment portfolios, should volatility continue to remain close to historical averages.”

Breakdown of how this doesn't actually mean anything, because I'm autistic:

This doesn’t actually mean anything. “Well positioned to do X” just means ‘could happen’. It doesn’t actually promise any outsized gains at all, it ascribes no likelihood to this scenario, it does not quantify anything, at all, and it even conditions the potential hypothetical gains on a the vaguely defined condition of volatility remaining ‘close’ to ‘historical averages’, again totally unquantified. This would be dubious to expect to continue in perpetuity and without deviation, because both for the market and for people’s interpersonal lives, the extremely normal pattern is that volatilty remains within ‘normal’ bounds for a while, but will also predictably have short but highly intense bursts from time to time. So these entirely predictable volatility bursts break the condition. … But to someone with less knowledge of or experience with both markets and relationships, it seems good that something is well positioned to exceed standard growth, it seems reasonable that things will stay close to historical averages, so the ‘vibe’ takeaway is positive, and the mentioned (potential but utterly without basis) outsized growth was both in the short term and enduring year over year! Even though the actual content of what was said is literally nothing beyond jargon laden flim flam that has no ultimate literal meaning, nor legal liability.

skulblaka@sh.itjust.works on 20 Jan 23:03 collapse

Hey, give credit where it’s due.

Some people work quite hard to make sure their jargon laden flim flam has no ultimate literal meaning nor legal liability.

oakey66@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 03:54 next collapse

No.

sem@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 19 Jan 04:45 collapse

Aka why not to have headlines in the form of a question.

dnzm@feddit.nl on 19 Jan 07:21 collapse

AKA Betteridge’s law of headlines.

seven_phone@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 03:56 next collapse

So now we are actually to the point where we can ask if a corporation or more widely anything at all has any value if it makes no profit.

There are people in the world who by luck of birth or circumstance have amassed obscene wealth and they after the fact are trying to convince everyone that profit is the only thing of value. These are the real public enemies.

TachyonTele@lemm.ee on 19 Jan 04:08 next collapse

Altman has since said the company is losing money on its $200-per-month Pro subscriptions, which offer limitless access to its most recent model, OpenAI o1, and to its video generator, Sora AI. “People use it much more than we expected,” he wrote in a post on X.

It’s ridiculous. More people use the product, so they’re losing money? What. That’s the complete opposite of what a business is.

Not to mention the environmental damage they’ve been doing for close to no positive results.

seven_phone@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 04:25 next collapse

Because the people that innovate do not care for business and are not good at it, but everything in this world we created has to be sold so there is always this initial mismatch before the business graduate vultures, who innovate nothing descend on it, beg control and then go way too far in the opposite direction. At that late point the only innovation will be a slightly more rounded set of icons on the website.

Cruxifux@feddit.nl on 19 Jan 04:37 next collapse

I almost shat myself in half when I saw how much water is needed for cooling for every prompt

kate@lemmy.uhhoh.com on 19 Jan 05:34 collapse

needed? no, water cooling was a choice

Cruxifux@feddit.nl on 19 Jan 05:40 collapse

Used was probably a better term there.

floofloof@lemmy.ca on 19 Jan 09:17 collapse

Why is the water consumed? Can it not be cooled and recirculated?

wewbull@feddit.uk on 19 Jan 15:48 collapse

Easier to dump the hot water and get new cold water.

nolefan33@sh.itjust.works on 19 Jan 04:39 collapse

It’s not more people using the product, it’s the limited population who are paying $200/month use it way more than they thought they would. So the costs per person paying that are going way over $200/month. Basically, they made the mistake of setting a fuck off price that was too low and a bunch of people did the math and took them up on the offer.

dragonfly4933@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 19 Jan 07:07 collapse

If the product costs that much to run, and most users aren’t abusing their access, it’s possible the product isn’t profitable at any price that enough users are willing to pay.

masterspace@lemmy.ca on 19 Jan 08:43 collapse

This is dumb. Moore’s law may be mostly dead, but chips are still progressing at an absurd pace. In 6 years you’ll be able to run the o1 model on a raspberry Pi with no internet access.

dragonfly4933@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 19 Jan 09:16 next collapse

Maybe, but i never mentioned years into the future. Of course technology will improve. The hardware will get better and more effcient, and the algorithms and techniques will improve.

But as it stands now, i still think what i said is true. We obviously don’t have exact numbers, so i can only speculate.

Having lots of memory is a big part of inference, so I was going to reply to you that prices of memory stopped going down at a similar historical rate, but i found this, which is interesting

ourworldindata.org/…/historical-cost-of-computer-…

The cost when down by about 0.1x from 2000 to 2010. 2010-2020 it was only about 0.23x. 2020-2023 shows roughly another halving of the price, which is still a pretty good rate.

The available memory is still only one part. The speed of the memory and the compute connected to it also plays a big part in how these current systems work.

Zos_Kia@lemmynsfw.com on 19 Jan 22:16 collapse

There’s absolutely no doubt that lower-end models are going to keep improving and that inference will keep getting cheaper. It won’t be on a Raspberry but my money’s with you. In 6 years you’ll be able to buy some cheap-ish specialized hardware to run open models on and they’re gonna be at least as capable as today’s frontier models while burning a fraction of the energy.

In fact i wouldn’t be surprised if frontier models were somehow overtaken by vastly cheaper models in the long run. The whole “trillion parameter count” paradigm feels very hacky and ripe for radical simplification. And wouldn’t it be hilarious ? All those suckers spending billions building a moat only to see it swept under their feet.

boonhet@lemm.ee on 19 Jan 14:20 next collapse

lmaoooo

wewbull@feddit.uk on 19 Jan 15:44 collapse

Nvidias latest gen looks to be 30% faster after 2 years of development with about the same power usage increase. So no reduction in Joules per GOP, just a speed increase.

In 6 years they might go 2x the speed of today but need double the watts (to deliver the same energy in half the time).

john89@lemmy.ca on 19 Jan 08:42 next collapse

This is the post-scarcity shift. This is how it happens.

We need to take, by force, those who have too much and give it to those who have too little.

They will be kicking and screaming. That means we’re doing something right, because they are not our allies.

wewbull@feddit.uk on 19 Jan 15:39 collapse

A company can have value without making profit. It can own assets. It has value in its staff.

Now should it have a valuation like OpenAI? Fuck no!

TachyonTele@lemm.ee on 19 Jan 04:02 next collapse

valued at $157 billion

Isn’t profitable

Pick one.

Chozo@fedia.io on 19 Jan 04:14 next collapse

They're not mutually exclusive. The Hope Diamond is valued at around $300 million, but it doesn't make any profit.

TachyonTele@lemm.ee on 19 Jan 06:15 collapse

The Hope Diamond isn’t a business.

technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 19 Jan 17:10 collapse

Neither is “AI” apparently.

TachyonTele@lemm.ee on 19 Jan 18:05 collapse

Ha, you could say its a Hope Unicorn

brlemworld@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 07:14 next collapse

Is a private company that can say it’s worth whatever they want it doesn’t make it true. Only public companies have to have the bare minimum of transparency

TachyonTele@lemm.ee on 19 Jan 13:16 collapse

I think you misunderstand what valued at means.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 19 Jan 17:06 collapse

Profitable means your revenue is higher than your expenses. Valuation is whatever someone is willing to buy your business for (i.e. what they think the company could earn in the future). They are completely separate concepts, and a highly profitable company could have a low valuation while an unprofitable company can have a high valuation based purely on the future potential of the company.

Nougat@fedia.io on 19 Jan 04:06 next collapse

That's because it's just gambling.

ChapulinColorado@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 07:50 collapse

With extra steps.

Xanthrax@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 04:12 next collapse

Yeah, but not for shitty companies. I’m down to invest in a mom and pop if it helps get it off the ground. Fuck pump and dumps, and people who inflate bubbles.

expatriado@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 04:42 next collapse

pretty typical with tech companies, people get too optimistic sometimes

jeffw@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 06:13 next collapse

It’s typical for tech companies to organize as nonprofits and then restructure because they are losing cash?

Not sure if I’m misunderstanding you or what part you think is typical

masterspace@lemmy.ca on 19 Jan 08:41 collapse

It’s typical for tech companies to reorganize because they are losing cash, yes.

john89@lemmy.ca on 19 Jan 08:25 collapse

People want to jump on the bandwagon and assume they know everything about new technology.

It’s really easy to take advantage of these laymen with things like traveling to mars or… building underground highways of tubes so people can use transportation like those bank chutes.

I hope one day, we as a species can recognize these patterns so that we may take steps to break them.

We don’t need some “big new tech” to solve the world’s problems. We need to turn around and help out our fellow man who has less than us. We have the tools, just not the desire.

It’s a cultural problem.

mrvictory1@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 05:54 next collapse

Spotify hasn’t made a profit at all since its inception afaik.

OhVenus_Baby@lemmy.ml on 19 Jan 19:28 collapse

No way with their user base being so massive they are net loss. Can’t be true

mrvictory1@lemmy.world on 20 Jan 04:27 next collapse

Labels take %70 of royalties, leaving Spotify %30. Also they dropped a lot of momey into podcasts. www.businessofapps.com/data/spotify-statistics/

OhVenus_Baby@lemmy.ml on 20 Jan 15:50 collapse

That is absolutely wild. These really aren’t businesses if they aren’t profitable and sustainable cash flow wise. When the money dries up your screwed. Hard times define the company not the peaks.

DjMeas@lemm.ee on 20 Jan 19:00 collapse

Spotify on Tuesday said it anticipates reaching profitability for the full year in 2024, which would mark the company’s first full profitable year since it launched 18 years ago.

axios.com/…/spotify-projects-first-full-year-of-p…

OhVenus_Baby@lemmy.ml on 20 Jan 19:33 collapse

Wild. You would think they would have restructured somehow rather than banking on investor money in hopes that doesn’t dry up and to be net loss for 18 years just goes to show there is too much dumb money in the system at play.

Fizz@lemmy.nz on 19 Jan 06:59 next collapse

removing the cost of R&D I would assume its profitable right? Once the model is trained running it takes significantly less computing. OpenAI has a fuck ton of customers so I would assume they are making back the cost of running their model API.

Evotech@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 07:00 next collapse

I don’t think so

brisk@aussie.zone on 19 Jan 07:23 next collapse

techcrunch.com/…/openai-is-losing-money-on-its-pr…

Edit: on further inspection this is covered in the article

Fizz@lemmy.nz on 19 Jan 08:43 collapse

thanks and holy shit thats a lot of revenue

jacksilver@lemmy.world on 21 Jan 05:10 collapse

With these kinds of models you can’t ever stop training them, otherwise you reach a point where the data becomes dated and thus the model is dated.

Think world events. Say another bird flu became a pandemic. The model can only know about that if it’s trained on those events.

There are systems (Rag) that can answer questions based on additional content, but that would only work on a subset of problems/situations.

Fizz@lemmy.nz on 21 Jan 10:57 collapse

Oh true i did not consider that they require constant training to stay up to date.

[deleted] on 19 Jan 07:08 next collapse

.

brlemworld@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 07:13 next collapse

Isn’t it a private company? They could say it’s worth infinity trillion dollars…

addie@feddit.uk on 19 Jan 08:08 collapse

No, not quite. They’re funded by venture capitalists, who put money into investment rounds on the understanding (speculative gamble?) that the company will have a given future value. The last funding round was $6.6bn on the basis that the company will be worth $157bn when it is floated on the stock market. Ed Zitron has quite a good analysis on his page, and also why their business is a complete pile of shite:

www.wheresyoured.at/oai-business/

brlemworld@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 08:56 collapse

They still aren’t required to go through SEC regulations and can make up some PR nonsense evaluation.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 19 Jan 17:02 collapse

They can say what they want, but investors won’t invest if the ask is too high. These valuations are based on purchase of a given percent of shares, so you take the amount raised and divide by the percent sold and you get a valuation (a little more complicated than that, but that’s the gist).

john89@lemmy.ca on 19 Jan 08:22 next collapse

Gotta keep in mind, profit can always be distorted based on how much employees are getting paid.

Someone is making money. In fact, a lot of people are.

andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.works on 19 Jan 08:56 next collapse

As a major investor into Open AI future, I’d gladly exchange all my non-existing stakes for a blowjob by fugly Sam Altman. It wouldn’t turn into any profits, but for some time, he’d have something in his mouth that isn’t a lie or a sketchy promo. I believe, some on Open AI board would even pay me to keep him silent.

Mrkawfee@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 10:49 next collapse

It’s a “pure play”

youtu.be/BzAdXyPYKQo?si=HsGBkB7K-j3wTL16

T156@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 13:39 next collapse

It shouldn’t be, but it is. 20 years ago, in the far-off year of 2005, a lot of tech companies more or less followed the same path, where it took decades for them to actually be profitable, if they were at all.

YouTube ran at a deficit for something close to 15 years. AI companies are likely following this trend, and running mostly on investment money, rather than being self-sufficient.

jj4211@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 15:56 next collapse

Tech companies were in that boat in the late 90s as well.

The dot com bust deflated it somewhat, but somehow the industry got right back to it within a couple of years.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 19 Jan 16:57 next collapse

I don’t know about now, but Amazon ran a deficit for pretty much its entire existence. Amazon is a bit different though since it was part of an R&D strategy and they could’ve stepped off the gas at almost any point and been profitable.

Zos_Kia@lemmynsfw.com on 19 Jan 21:33 collapse

That’s a long established myth. Amazon started out in 94, and became profitable in like 10 years. Most of their hardcore R&D is self-financed cause they generate just that much free cash.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 19 Jan 22:58 collapse

Right. They spend their free cash (and sometimes more) on R&D and infrastructure, which by definition means they’re unprofitable. Profit is what’s left after expenses, so if you have nothing left, you’re unprofitable.

Zos_Kia@lemmynsfw.com on 20 Jan 12:55 collapse

Thanks for clarifying that profit is calculated using a subtraction, but you’re missing the core of my comment. Amazon self-finance their R&D and STILL make a fuck load of profit. They made like 30B$ of free cash last year alone. In the last 15 years they’ve made >100B$ in overall profit and only been in the red twice.

They’re not just profitable they’re an insane money printing machine that doesn’t show any sign of slowing down.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 20 Jan 22:25 collapse

They’re a money printing machine, but they’re usually unprofitable because they spend it all.

If you made $1M/year and spent $1M/year, your household would be less profitable than one that made $100k and spent $90k. That’s what profit means, it’s the amount you keep after all expenses are paid (assets - liabilities). It’s obviously more complex since there are other measures (e.g. EBIT), but that’s generally how profitability is calculated.

Their R&D tends to go to things that will make more money, so it’s not wasted, but it’s only profit if they don’t spend it.

Zos_Kia@lemmynsfw.com on 21 Jan 07:57 collapse

Oh thanks for clarifying in even more excruciating details how a subtraction works that is really helpful.

Why would you repeat the lie that they’re “usually unprofitable” when the information is publically available in a million places on the internet ? In 2023 Amazon made :

  • 575B$ in sales
  • If you remove costs of goods that’s 270B$ in gross profit
  • If you remove operating expenses (including R&D) that’s 30B$ in net income

Amazon is factually not “usually unprofitable”, they have in fact made profit (as in money which actually goes into your pocket after discounting all expenses) every year for the last 15 years except in 2022 and some tiny losses in 2014 and 2012.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 21 Jan 11:01 collapse

The company started in 1994, posted it’s first profitable year in 2001, and had little or no profit through 2014. So for the first 20 years or 2/3 of the entire history of the company, they were unprofitable or barely profitable.

That’s my point, Amazon has historically been hugely unprofitable, so looking only at profit doesn’t tell the full story.

OpenAI was founded ~9 years ago, which isn’t all that different from the timeline for Amazon. They are in very different markets (ironically more similar now with AWS getting huge), with Amazon starting as a logistics company and OpenAI being a pure tech company, so the financials of both will look quite different.

Zos_Kia@lemmynsfw.com on 21 Jan 12:52 collapse

So for the first 20 years or 2/3 of the entire history of the company, they were unprofitable or barely profitable.

We must have a wildly different definition of “barely profitable”. Half a billion in 2004 money is a lot of profit, a billion back to back in 2009 and 2010 is a lot of profit.

I think you’re confusing Amazon with the next generation of loss-leader companies. Let’s talk Uber, let’s talk Twitter, if we want to point at “hugely unprofitable” companies. But Amazon is a beast of its own, they have a very coherent financial story. Even during their money-losing decade they posted insane results, frequently multiplying revenue while barely increasing operating costs.

ICastFist@programming.dev on 20 Jan 13:28 collapse

Pretty sure youtube still runs on deficit. Storage costs alone would probably bankrupt some small countries.

dan@upvote.au on 20 Jan 19:50 collapse

People don’t realise how much the storage and bandwidth costs are for a site as big as YouTube, and it keeps going up due to the huge number of videos being uploaded. People think that Google are making huge amounts of money from YouTube. In reality, they’re not breaking even and rely on other, profitable business units (like their Workspace and cloud services) to subsidize it.

There’s no way the ads fully cover the cost, and more and more people are blocking ads. Advertisers don’t pay for blocked ads, and YouTubers don’t make any ad money from your views if you use an ad blocker. (this is the main reason YouTubers say they make less money from ads than they used to - ad blockers)

yonder@sh.itjust.works on 20 Jan 19:56 collapse

I guess the cost is worth it to Google just to entrench themselves and their products even further into the lives of most people.

dan@upvote.au on 20 Jan 20:06 collapse

Yeah it’s part of their overall strategy to be seen as a core part of the internet / the web. Same as Yahoo in the 90s and early 2000s.

The more people that use their free services, the more appealing they are to advertisers compared to competing ad platforms (broader reach), and the more paid subscribers they get.

Products like Visual Studio, some Jetbrains IDEs, VMware ESXi, and a lot of SaaS products, are (or used to be) free for individuals or for open source usage for a similar reason - people get familiar with them at home, and end up recommending them and buying them at work. A few individuals liking the product can result in large companies signing paid contracts for tens of thousands of users.

dank@lemmy.today on 20 Jan 22:51 collapse

And it would give a competitor a foothold to build a competing ad business

yournamehere@lemm.ee on 19 Jan 13:44 next collapse

absolutely should. america lives in an idiocracy. a trump meme coin could be valued at 100trillion $ and thats fine. if you want feudalism with extra steps, this is exactly that. go buy some golden sneakers and maybe they’ll be worth a million some time or not.

vane@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 19:04 next collapse

That’s how every single company targeting consumer market in the web started. No profit for many years. Majority because of scale of the market. Facebook started making profit after 2012 so for 8 years they were burning money figuring out where to sell their soul to. Now the scale and risk for OpenAI is way bigger, because they have not sold their users fully or we don’t know if they sold it and for exchange for what. It would be funny if they at some point alter their privacy policy and turn out to sell people’s chats to advertising agencies. They might also go bankrupt or turned out to be a scam that hires thousands of people to answer questions.

LovableSidekick@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 19:15 next collapse

The history of the Internet and computers in general is full of investors willing to take seemingly insane chances on overvalued speculative ventures.

aesthelete@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 19:51 collapse

Private equity is so pumped full of cash that they basically have nothing better to do with it.

thisphuckinguy@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 19:21 next collapse

Chat GPT= Email Grammar Check.

OhVenus_Baby@lemmy.ml on 19 Jan 19:30 next collapse

Fuck no it should never be normal. Its against true business. If there wasn’t so much money in the system then a business would have to actually run like a real business.

aesthelete@lemmy.world on 19 Jan 19:51 next collapse

No.

harsh3466@lemmy.ml on 19 Jan 19:51 next collapse

Totally normal. Just keep throwing stupid amounts of money at it so it can find a way to undercut some existing business structure by operating at a loss until that business is dead and then enshittify. Profit! /s

Artyom@lemm.ee on 19 Jan 20:10 next collapse

Finance bros who run wall street are all idiots, so they designed a system where no matter how stupid they are, they’re always right. If you get a bunch of finance bros in a room and give a really good sales pitch, your valuation can triple despite nothing real actually happening.

In the case of AI, even the foremost experts are uncertain about how useful AI is. Qualified people disagree and no AI based tool has really proved itself to be robust, but it is amazing at fooling people who are either dumb or willfully ignorant, so it’s like crack cocaine to anyone who works on Wall Street.

Squizzy@lemmy.world on 20 Jan 08:53 collapse

There are multiple multiple useful implementations. They might not be ethical and cost people jobs but there are loads of smaller projects in use. We use it to analyse pictures of completed work to ensure it is to standard, has been working great and passed all audits.

frayedpickles@lemmy.cafe on 20 Jan 18:05 collapse

Are you talking about machine inspection? Cause that’s been around for decades. Why is that impacted by AI? You usually want the opposite of ai, a traceable way of verifying a part was made right every time.

Squizzy@lemmy.world on 20 Jan 19:22 collapse

Possibly? Its how things are installed in the field, if it as spec or not. We trained it on thousands of examples of right and wrong and now its reliable

MoogleMaestro@lemmy.zip on 21 Jan 04:44 collapse

Do you work at Boeing?

Because that would certainly explain some things.

intensely_human@lemm.ee on 20 Jan 05:26 next collapse

I should fucking hope OpenAI isn’t profitable.

Professorozone@lemmy.world on 20 Jan 09:49 next collapse

People always act like “how can company A be a thing when it isn’t profitable”. It isn’t about if company A is profitable. It’s about whether CEO A is making money. As long as that can happen and, you know, others at the top, company A is right on track.

cupcakezealot@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 20 Jan 10:11 next collapse

if you’re mad at this, don’t look at how much xai is worth.

ai is basically just a pump and dump for rich people before the bubble bursts

Zetta@mander.xyz on 20 Jan 19:18 next collapse

How is it pump and dump? These companies aren’t publicly traded.

Realitaetsverlust@lemmy.zip on 20 Jan 22:39 collapse

I’m really excited about your explanation how a pump and dump is going to work when openAI is not even publicly traded. So who’s gonna pump and dump what exactly?

frayedpickles@lemmy.cafe on 20 Jan 18:08 next collapse

You know when you’re playing a game and you think this is kinda dumb sure my gun now does 100 more damage but the baddies have 100 more health so really nothing has changed? But it still makes you feel better because well, it’s 100 more.

I think that’s how these valuations work.

phoenixz@lemmy.ca on 20 Jan 18:40 next collapse

Same goes for Tesla, it’s severely over bloated even if it’s bubble has shrunk a bit.

These sort of bubbles should be stopped by the government but why stop that if the politicians themselves are the ones having pumped millions into these bubbles?

First you gotta make a law prohibiting politicians from having stocks, then watch how fast this problem gets resolved

AA5B@lemmy.world on 20 Jan 20:24 collapse

Why should they be stopped by the government? That assumes the stock market should be logical and predictable but why should that be true? It’s all speculation, just a step above gambling, and people should be allowed to.

Tesla is a great example. Its stock has never been at an expected level for their revenue or profit. It’s all speculation about their potential to disrupt the car market (which they have), and predictions like 50% growth per year. Even now, self-driving and artificial intelligence seem a bit far fetched to most of us, but if they happen will be very disruptive.

But yes , politicians should have required ethics standards, including banning insider training. The rest of us have to: how does it make sense for our leaders to have lower ethical standards than everyone else?

SoftTeeth@lemmy.world on 20 Jan 21:48 next collapse

It should be forced to be logical and predictable because Capitalists have made it so the stock market is the only way to really save for retirement.

Our society and economy shouldn’t be a fun game for the whales to win at the expense of the rest of us.

pyre@lemmy.world on 20 Jan 22:48 next collapse

people should be allowed to

uh no they shouldn’t

Venator@lemmy.nz on 21 Jan 01:43 collapse

Why should they be stopped by the government?

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Depression

AA5B@lemmy.world on 21 Jan 03:55 collapse

Maybe, but hopefully the existing controls will prevent that from happening again …. Unless overzealous attempts at “reducing regulations” break those. There were quite a few factors around the Great Depression but consider controls like:

  • “circuit breakers”, automatically halt trading when a stock or the overall market drops too quickly
  • “qualified investors” are criteria you must meet for the riskiest investments, basically that you can handle the loss
  • bank requirements for capital, risk, so less likely to collapse
  • bank rescues - Lemmy likes to complain about rescuing banks instead of people, but bank collapses during a crisis are what can push the crash off the deep end

Also the overall size and complexity of the modern investment industry should make it much less likely for any one type of investment to drive a general crash.

Venator@lemmy.nz on 21 Jan 04:20 next collapse

See also: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_economic_crises#2…

AA5B@lemmy.world on 21 Jan 12:11 collapse

None of them have come close to the severity of the Great Depression. We’ll never control all instabilities, the important part is limiting their severity

Yes, I’ve been affected by several of these. I’ve gotten laid off during downturns. I’ve been affected by high interest rates. I’ve been affected by unattainable housing. But at least it wasn’t worse

Venator@lemmy.nz on 21 Jan 04:23 collapse

  • “qualified investors” are criteria you must meet for the riskiest investments, basically that you can handle the loss

I’m surprised you’re not calling that a government overreach considering your previous comment.

Do you think the current government controls are working and shouldn’t be changed at all?

AA5B@lemmy.world on 21 Jan 12:08 collapse

We haven’t had a real depression in 100 years, so something is working. Sure, we have recessions periodically and some are worse than others, but as long as it’s relatively limited.

I think that a lot of regulations were put in place for a reason. Whether they work for that reason or not, it would be better to understand the reason before blindly removing regulations

spujb@lemmy.cafe on 21 Jan 05:14 collapse

Yes and it should be worse. OpenAI should be forced to take on the cost of compensating every copyright holder it exploited. If that means OpenAI doesn’t exist I’m absolutely okay with that.