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Xiaomi in Chinese translates to "Little Rice"

Here is the meaning of the name

Described here: https://finance.sina.cn/tech/2020-11-26/detail-iiznctke33979...

在后来的讨论中,我突然想到了我最喜欢的一句话——“佛观一粒米,大如须弥山”。

Translated into English, it means:

“In the later discussions, I suddenly thought of one of my favorite sayings — ‘A Buddha sees a single grain of rice as vast as Mount Sumeru.’”

This expression emphasizes the idea that even something seemingly small (like a grain of rice) can hold immense significance or value when viewed from a different perspective.

Thanks to chatgpt for translating this


Not defending google but I don't believe that Google is sending the passwords anywhere

This is how 1password does it for their watchtower feature (basiclaly same feature as your google example)

https://support.1password.com/watchtower-privacy/

The way it works is that instead of sending your password to their server to check (which they do not do that). They download known a list of leaked password to local to check.


I think that you are too naively wrong on this.

The wording of Google is very very ambiguous there avoid to say that they are sending it but says that they are encrypting your credentials so that Google can't know it.

I have found the following page that gives more details:

https://community.spiceworks.com/t/is-google-chromes-passwor...

So if what it says is true, they don't exactly send your password, but still quite a lot of data about your credentials, in addition with the fact that you are trying to connect to a website based on the fact that you are doing the request at this exact moment.

Again, in theory I don't have a problem with them providing that kind of service. Just not to suddenly enable it for users in secret, hide very well the way to disable that, and especially when you asked Google to not manage your passwords.

A good question to ask is why the option to disable that is not located near the parameters for password and password management in the browser?


why were these emails released as part of the FTC's lawsuit against google.

How did the FTC get microsoft's email over an antitrust lawsuit against google


I don't think you can just say that bout the last raise.

Depends on the exercise price. Exercise price is lower than the preferred price that the investor paid. Due to the fact that investors get preferred shares.

409a can often be 20% of the preferred valuation.


Preferred vs common only matters when the company is sold at loss? The preferred shareholders get priority in terms of being made whole before the common shareholders.

In this case, since series C was 1.5bln and sold for $975m, then the preferred shares were bought during C would be made whole first (assuming the prior rounds were made whole first and there's enough left over for series C preferred) before those who exercised right after the valuation for common shares.

Edit: I forgot that preferred shares also come with liquidation preferences too, meaning that in a loss situation, later employees are highly unlikely to get something


I don’t believe 1 infers 2.

2 is useful information and additive to conversation

1 is just juvenile and belongs to Reddit not hacker news


I recently started using hosted codespaces (because I bought a apple M1 and ran into a lot of issues with compilation)

I started with gitpod and then moved to GitHub codespaces after 1 weeks.

GitHub codespaces is just miles better in terms of features AND first class integration AND reliability (I gave up on gitpod after 2 consecutive nights of not being able to connect into my pod).

While I hope gitpod all the best and want them to do super well. It is hard for me to imagine going back


<3 thanks. We are sorry to hear that you had a rough experience, know that it was terrible couple days on our side as well. If you want to catch up and share insights in person https://ghuntley.com/meet

I’m also M1 (iPad and Mac) and cross-targeting needs is a boon for either Gitpod or GitHub Codespaces especially when using Nix.


Do we know what happened to the other 59 children?


There is a book with 2 editions published by the researcher about them.

An excerpt can be found here: https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/EJ746290.pdf

The outcomes depend on how much and when the students were accelerated in school.

ETA:

The two extremes:

“… 17 of the 60 young people were radically accelerated. None has regrets. Indeed, several say they would probably have preferred to accelerate still further or to have started earlier…. The majority entered college between ages 11 and 15. Several won scholarships to attend prestigious universi- ties in Australia or overseas. All have graduated with extremely high grades and, in most cases, university prizes for exemplary achieve- ment. All 17 are characterized by a passionate love of learning and almost all have gone on to obtain their Ph.D.s.”

“The remaining 33 young people were retained, for the duration of their schooling,… Two dropped out of high school and a number have dropped out of university. Several more have had ongoing difficul- ties at university,…”

Based on this HN comment [1] it appears the participants have been anonymized. It also quotes some of Terrence Tao’s education and makes a claim there was someone else who may have equaled Tao in math ability, but did not have the educational support structure to recognize and nurture it.

[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=11510032


It's great to see the positive outcomes of acceleration. I saw so many kids burn out on accelerated programs, and have generally become cautious about them.

It's also nice to know that 2 years was enough for positive lives even for the "genius" children, which sets a sort of upper bound!


Can apple appeal in this case to a higher court not in Texas? (As I understand, a lot parent cases are brought to one small district in Texas)

And secondly can apple stop doing business in east Texas all together so that Rodney gilstrap no longer has jurisdiction?


> Can apple appeal in this case to a higher court not in Texas? (As I understand, a lot parent cases are brought to one small district in Texas)

Yes, appeals in patent cases go to the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, and then to the Supreme Court. Both are based in Washington, DC.

> And secondly can apple stop doing business in east Texas all together so that Rodney gilstrap no longer has jurisdiction?

Venue can be complicated. See recent SCOTUS ruling here: https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/16pdf/16-341_8n59.pdf


As a quick tangent, has anyone tried watching movies in VR?

If you haven’t, try it. I have been watching stuff in my oculus quest 2 and it is pretty darn awesome. I think this is the future, most definitely.

Oculus quest 2 still is not perfect. But I cannot imagine going to the theater with a few more generations of VR. (Oculus quest 5 maybe???)


Ugh, I love watching movies on my 2D screen while talking to other people and having some snacks.

I can't imagine myself (EVER!) changing that experience to one that isolates me and requires me to have a crappy headset squeezing my temples for two hours or so.

Just, no. NOOOOO!


I don't think that's true right. Peter Thiel purchased shares in Paypal at $0.001 per share, which is far below fair market value.

The "theft" here is the undervaluation of the shares with which he purchased at


You realize that when forming a company, the number of shares you issue is arbitrary, right? If three founders each put in $1 capital, and each get 1 share, then the price per share is $1. If instead the founders get 1 million shares each, then each share is worth 1 millionth of a dollar. What economic difference does it make?

Or are you claiming that on the day that he paid $0.001 per share, someone else paid more per share? If that didn't happen, there is NO WAY to determine after the fact what the “true” market value was on that date.


> Or are you claiming that on the day that he paid $0.001 per share, someone else paid more per share

I suspect this was the case. Hypothetical example: Class A shares were available for $100 each, and Class B shares for $0.0001 each, but you could only get a B share by buying an A share. With the implicit (or explicit?) promise to merge the share classes together eventually to cause the prices to converge and massively inflate the Roth IRA side of the investment where you stashed the B shares.

So the $0.0001 shares all cost you $100 each to buy, but that $100 comes from outside your $2000 contribution limit.


You don’t need two classes of shares for this you are over complicating things


Yeah, could just do the share issuance in 2 stages: the first at $0.000001 then later at >$1 to raise useful capital.

But multiple share classes often exist anyway for various reasons (different preferences upon liquidation, different voting polices, different retraction policies, different dividend policies, etc)


Yes

I believe Bain Capital used separate share classes to pump their employees 401ks

That level of collaboration and financial engineering should be encouraged


The article says that Paypal filings with the SEC stated that the purchase was below fair value.

The fun thing about your second paragraph is that courts don't care whether it is true.


Who sold him those shares?


That's not how it works. When you incorporate, the corporation has shares split among the founders. The founders themselves determine the "par" value of each share - essentially its intrinsic worth.

You have to pay this amount of money to acquire the shares upon incorporation. (Each state does it a little differently.) So it's generally made a very low value between $0.0001 and $0.01. You'd pay the same amount if you were to incorporate a new business. That's it. He put some of his founding shares in Paypal in the Roth IRA when he founded the company and he got incredibly lucky. Nothing sinister happened.


Except if these were founder shares, he would likely be disqualified. "Disqualified person...an officer, director (or an individual having powers or responsibilities similar to those of officers or directors), a 10 percent or more shareholder, or a highly compensated employee (earning 10 percent or more of the yearly wages of an employer)"

  (2)Disqualified person
  For purposes of this section, the term “disqualified person” means a person who is—
  (A)a fiduciary;
  (B)a person providing services to the plan;
  (C)an employer any of whose employees are covered by the plan;
  (D)an employee organization any of whose members are covered by the plan;
  (E)an owner, direct or indirect, of 50 percent or more of—
  (i)the combined voting power of all classes of stock entitled to vote or the total value of shares of all 
  classes of stock of a corporation,
  (ii)the capital interest or the profits interest of a partnership, or
  (iii)the beneficial interest of a trust or unincorporated enterprise,
  which is an employer or an employee organization described in subparagraph (C) or (D);
  (F)a member of the family (as defined in paragraph (6)) of any individual described in subparagraph (A), 
  (B), (C), or (E);
  (G)a corporation, partnership, or trust or estate of which (or in which) 50 percent or more of—
  (i)the combined voting power of all classes of stock entitled to vote or the total value of shares of all 
  classes of stock of such corporation,
  (ii)the capital interest or profits interest of such partnership, or
  (iii)the beneficial interest of such trust or estate,
  is owned directly or indirectly, or held by persons described in subparagraph (A), (B), (C), (D), or (E);
  (H)an officer, director (or an individual having powers or responsibilities similar to those of officers or 
  directors), a 10 percent or more shareholder, or a highly compensated employee (earning 10 percent or more 
  of the yearly wages of an employer) of a person described in subparagraph (C), (D), (E), or (G); or
  (I)a 10 percent or more (in capital or profits) partner or joint venturer of a person described in 
  subparagraph (C), (D), (E), or (G).
  The Secretary, after consultation and coordination with the Secretary of Labor or his delegate, may by 
  regulation prescribe a percentage lower than 50 percent for subparagraphs (E) and (G) and lower than 10 
  percent for subparagraphs (H) and (I).
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/4975


I was surprised by that also and asked a friend who has a CPA, but doesn't work in tax law. Their first comment after briefly scanning the legal code is that "disqualified person" is only used within the context of "prohibited transaction". The definition of "prohibited transaction" concerning "disqualified person" doesn't seem to address this case. Instead, it seems to focus on dealing with the Roth IRA assets in a manner to benefits ones accounts outside of the Roth.


I don't know if that's a distinction with a difference. The rules are that they don't want you investing in a business you have material control over, as part of your IRA. Maybe it's because they think it's too risky, or can lead to self-dealing abuses...or $5 Billion tax loopholes.

The guidance they give you may be helpful

Department of Labor (DOL) Advisory Opinions suggest that under the following circumstances, a prohibited transaction would likely occur:

The transaction is part of an agreement by which an IRA owner causes IRA assets to be used in a manner designed to benefit the IRA owner (or any person in which the IRA owner has an interest) such that it would affect the exercise of the IRA owner's best judgment as an IRA fiduciary. The IRA owner receives or will receive compensation from the subject company.

By the terms or nature of the transaction, a conflict of interest exists between the IRA and the IRA owner (or persons in which the IRA owner has an interest).

The IRA owner will be relying upon or otherwise be dependent upon the IRA investment in order for the IRA owner (or persons in which the IRA owner has an interest) to undertake or to continue the investment (e.g., minimum investment to be satisfied jointly by the IRA and IRA owner).

https://www.dwt.com/blogs/startup-law-blog/2020/10/startup-i...

https://www.irs.gov/retirement-plans/plan-participant-employ...


I think that was the poster's point.


It is in the article "Mr. Thiel purchased his founders’ shares in PayPal through his Roth IRA during PayPal’s formation"

I am willing the venture a guess that the initial valuation was far greater than 0.001 per share. And this was all an accounting trick to exploit IRA


I'd guess $.001 is the par value and there was no 409A valuation. The initial basis doesn't really matter if it is essentially zero or $1 or $5 in this case. The implied current price on the founders shares is approximately $2500.

I agree with Propublica's take

Yet, from the start, a small number of entrepreneurs, like Thiel, made an end run around the rules: Open a Roth with $2,000 or less. Get a sweetheart deal to buy a stake in a startup that has a good chance of one day exploding in value. Pay just fractions of a penny per share, a price low enough to buy huge numbers of shares. Watch as all the gains on that stock — no matter how giant — are shielded from taxes forever, as long as the IRA remains untouched until age 59 and a half. Then use the proceeds, still inside the Roth, to make other investments.

I also think that there should be a cap on tax free distributions sheltered by Roths, and they should not be transferable upon death.


I disagree with ProPublica's take. If it was as simple as "pay just fractions of a penny per share... watch as all the gains..." then we would all do it. Not just with Roth IRAs, but with our entire portfolios. The reason we don't all do this is because startups are very very risky. Some people will succeed and walk away with windfalls. Other people will lose their shirts. If there was arbitrage, there would be a an "app for that" and there would be more billionaires walking around.


What they seem to be suggesting is that a fair valuation (well reasoned given all information) of the shares would have put the investment at millions of dollars, but due to a peculiarity of historical accounting, they could be put at worth $2K because that was the creation price and the last print.

For instance, it might be that a funding round was about to happen. This is never a sure thing, so you could claim that the shares are not worth the full price (and in any case the only trade was at 2K), while privately thinking "hmm, my shares are now worth x millions".

You then sell the shares to the Roth, thinking yourself that you're putting x millions in the vehicle while reporting 2K.

Doesn't sound illegal to me, but it also doesn't sound like things are supposed to work this way.


Or just exclude private shares from Roth IRAs.

Most people are non-accredited investors and therefore ineligible to buy them.

Startups won’t miss out on the $2000/yr from the few that are eligible.


This is what Canada does with its Roth equivalent, the TFSA.


Though Canada restricts your private shares to Canadian corps. Not as many startup home runs that stay Canadian before becoming public.


Forcing all IRA investment through publicly listed companies sounds like exactly the law a hedge fund would write. Why allow people to invest in assets you can own without going through a Wall Street investment bank?

Regulatory capture is forcing the entire economy through your cartel in the name of nominal protection.


Publicly listed companies are equally available opportunities for anyone participating in the contribution rate-limited game of Roth IRA maximization.

Private share contributions give huge asymmetric upside to private investors/founders. Yes they take risk in that their shares still have to end up being worth something one day, but clearly the upside tax advantages are ridiculously unbalanced against the middle class because not everyone has access to early stage investments.

So, even the playing field by:

- Letting anyone invest in early stage companies (this has many other implications)

Or

- Only allow cash contributions to IRAs


You can buy publicly traded companies without going through brokers/stock exchanges.

What can be assured is that the exchange can be booked at a market value, which can never be guaranteed in a private sale in an opaque market, risking shenanigans to shift value beyond the contribution limit.

(You can say a corp’s initial shares have zero value, but we can all agree here that a Corp formed to execute on a startup team’s plan/idea absolutely does have value).


The key is knowing exactly which startup to put your $2000 in.


> The key here is that if you have to reliably identify exactly which startup to put your $2000 in.

No. Theil was already making a risky startup bet, so the "reliably identify" point is moot. All this maneuver did was let him avoid all the taxes he'd owe if it paid off.


No, the key is being able to sell yourself something for far less than its actual value so that you can squeeze millions of dollars worth of assets into the few thousand dollar contribution limit for an IRA.


All shares issued at founding have a near-zero cost because, while you technically need to buy the shares, the company (by definition) is worth $0 on the day you start it.

There is no tax gimmick involved in that part. If you require entrepreneurs to buy shares of their own company for large sums of money on the day they start the company, it would dissuade many entrepreneurs. On the day I incorporated my company in Delaware, my debt exceeded my assets and the startup was going to be my only profession.


Sure - there's no problem with valuing those shares at $0.001 in general, because there's not much that valuation matters for in the short term (eventually you will pay different taxes depending on the end result of your company).

However, Roth IRAs specifically are a tax shelter and have contribution limits, so valuations matter a whole lot for them (difference in $0.01 per share vs $0.001 per share would be a difference of $500M vs $5B today). That's why I think illiquid (or non-market cleared) securities should not be allowed in Roth IRAs.


> That's why I think illiquid (or non-market cleared) securities should not be allowed in Roth IRAs.

That + a cap on tax shelter would solve the issue, if it needs solving.

Perhaps also prohibit equity from any source where you aren't arms length.


> the company (by definition) is worth $0 on the day you start it.

Is it?

If Elon Musk forms a corporation tomorrow, its market value is more than $0 before he does a single thing with it.

And that’s all the IRS should care about for Roth contribution limits: market value.

If I buy 1000 shares of PayPal from my mom for $2000 (mkt value: a lot more!) and put that into my IRA and tell the IRS that $2000 is the price we agreed (in the marketplace of the dinner table).


If, at the moment of formation, the company has a binding agreement with Elon Musk (the founder) requiring their services for a fixed time allocation and at a fixed rate of remuneratin, then yes that contract has value and therefore the company has value. The value will depend on the remuneration to Mr. Musk vs the perceived value of his services. Even so, it would be as one of a small % of outliers with high-value founders amongst the millions of companies incorporated every year. Was Peter Thiel as valued when he started paypal as he is now? No.

More importantly, acknowleding that very few companies may have value at inception due to the value (and commitment) of their founders' time doesn't make it any easier to systematically value that time. To legally enforce this, you would have to have valuation and audit service providers who do this - creating a bureaucratic hurde that every founder - famous or not has to go through - just to start a company.

It is my opinion that the cost of doing this - in reducing or slowing down the number of companies started and the lost taxes as a result - would significanty outweigh any gain in taxes from taxing the notional value of Elon Musks's presence as part of his own company.

All laws that apply to humans, particular compliance related laws, have significant second order effects. The second order effect of taxing the popularity of folks when they start a company is that thousands of less rich, less popular, less privileged, and less confident first time founders will face an additional hurdle when starting a business and they may never start one, never get rich through one. Ultimately, inequality would likely increase and rich established founders like Elon Musk and Peter Thiel would likely be more entrenched and benefit more from this, not less.


> If Elon Musk forms a corporation tomorrow, its market value is more than $0 before he does a single thing with it.

If there’s anyone stupid enough to value such a company at more than $0, Elon should sell that company and just start another one. Infinite money machine. He should call it Bitcoin or NFT or something similar...


People will throw money at a company that has done nothing solely based on the people behind it.

I mean, people throw their money at companies that actively burn money with unlikely prospects of overcoming their death spiral. One that hasn’t even started should at least be worth much much more than those.


When the company is formed the valuation is genuinely very small because it has no assets, customers, etc. Buying some of your shares in a Roth IRA at this point is relatively common, enough so that I've heard multiple people suggest that founders do it.


Yeah, I doubt Thiel came up with this himself. Was probably recommended by accountants whom should all be familiar with Roth IRAs.

But the possibilities of windfall tax-free profits made sure everyone kept quiet about it.


Are you saying that Peter Thiel should have known that he would turn PayPal into a multibillion dollar business, and because of this, the shares were not really worthless?

EDIT: That was sarcastic, but re-reading, that basically is what the article is saying:

> Get a sweetheart deal to buy a stake in a startup that has a good chance of one day exploding in value.

20-20 hindsight


it’s honestly no wonder that the masses assumes inaccessibly expensive accountants are necessary to simply think clearly


Its still surprising to me that you got this backwards. There is no reason to ever choose a higher par value than that then when forming a company.


As a founder you can grant yourself options or shares at essentially infinitesimally small values in the very early days of the company and pay virtually no tax.


Other countries only allow shares of publicly traded companies to be added to tax shelter savings accounts. This seems like a reasonably fair way to prevent people with significant resources from taking advantage of the system in ways the general public cannot. Someone getting returns in excess of hundreds of thousands of percent should be able to afford paying a few percent in tax to help pay for the infrastructure society has provided to make success in industry possible.


Forgive my ignorance but I was under the impression this was startup founders standard operating procedure.

1. Form a C Corp

2. Grant founders shares at $0.000x/share

3. Early exercise all of said shares at basically nothing

4. Make 83(b) election to IRS

5. Take advantage of long term cap gains and qsbs

I’m sure plenty of folks in this forum have done similar things, the only difference is mr. thiel put it into his Roth account, essentially betting on himself and it paid off big time.


The difference is 83b defers tax until you sell, while IRAs don't allow you to buy assets from yourself


The UK doesn't there are a number of schemes that allow this.

Everyone in the private company I work for has EMI options that trigger on change of control.


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