| I’m making my comments in the context of the thread: >we need new antitrust laws that are a bit more proactive when it comes to super-massive companies like Adobe > What do you think happens to VC investments when it’s harder for companies to be acquired? > maybe a culture of creating small companies out of VC capital only to be acquired by megacorps is not the best way forward for society > What would the alternative be? There will always come a day when founders and investors want to move on > A company like figma could have always just gone public if the founders/investors just wanted to get out The whole point was that anti trust should be stepping in more, and then people were making over the top claims about there being no alternative. The whole point is that it is not up to the public shareholders to sell to whoever they want if the government will block the sale. |
Nobody said such a thing. I did ask what the alternative is. Going public isn't an alternative. That's what is happening. Figma is being transferred into a public trust. And that is the worry expressed with respect to its future, because the general public has no reason to care about the product and will not act in the interest of the product.
Anti-trust could, in theory, do more to prevent the general public from not caring about the product they control. The problem is that laws (where Figma and Adobe are located) are prescribed by the very same general public, so you have to convince them its a good idea. And if you've done that, the law becomes largely superfluous because at that point they're already on board and will act as such on their own accord.