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by attack 6655 days ago
Or, equally useful would be if YC and clones could help smooth candidates' entry into the US. Has YC ever considered signing off on the founders' visas as their employer? Or providing the services of a good immigration lawyer for free?

Perhaps this should be the task of some of the overseas YC "clones" to come to SV, setup shop and perform the above, given the location's well known advantages?

2 comments

I wish it was that easy to get a work visa to come into US :(. As PG said in one of the essays about why Silicon Valley is special, immigration is one area where it falls flat.

Getting a work visa is next to impossible these days. You apply by Apr 1 and you MAY know in OCT if your visa was approved or not - it is a lottery system.

6 months is a lifetime for a YC startup.

IMHO, there must be another solution, like setting up a YC hub in Vancouver or something :)

there could be multiple solution - one can start the yc shop in Canada and/or BRIC - the talent market in these countries is huge - the other option for pg is to see whether they can start franchising - the most important thing in this model is connections with VCs - if someone can bring VCs on board then even few investors, entrepreneurs and hackers can come together and start a clone.