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by Xixi
193 days ago
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Steward-ownership is a philosophy more than an actual structure, my understanding is that each such company is in practice structured somewhat differently. This article explains roughly how Patagonia is structured: https://medium.com/@purpose_network/the-patagonia-structure-... For Patagonia a trust owns 100% of the voting rights, while a charity collects 100% of the dividends. I don't doubt that there are ways the structure could be subverted, but it's a far cry from "money without oversight". Do you have examples of Steward-owned companies that ended up with "well, we might as well spend the extra profits on executive benefits"-issues? (I personally think Steam should go in that direction, otherwise I'm afraid enshittification is unavoidable once Gabe Newell is no longer at the helm) |
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The model has worked well for many decades for a 100 billion$ revenue company like Bosch, good to see others taking a cue from them.
(Also goes to show that even constructs like these are not safe from corporate fuckups - see the emissions scandal...)