Comment on Grok Says It Would Kill Every Jewish Person on the Planet to Save Elon Musk
t3rmit3@beehaw.org 1 week agoYou quoted the wrong part, then. The company cap that Phoenixz proposed was $1 billion, not $10-20 million. Companies can easily build large-scale projects with a billion, and projects that are going to run over that should probably be weighed against public interest and publicly-funded and managed, if they’re beneficial.
locuester@lemmy.zip 1 week ago
Like I said, the quote was related to my first paragraph asking the question about personal net worth.
I didn’t then quote the company part as I thought the flow continued logically. It seems I was wrong.
I’m aware of the cap he said, and that’s what I was asking an opinion on.
Thank you for contributing yours.
So large skyscrapers, large nuclear plants, datacenters, etc would be state owned.
If we did that, I’d argue to make the limit even smaller. It would encourage companies to stay small and that would help prevent monopolies perhaps.
t3rmit3@beehaw.org 1 week ago
Not state-owned, just state-managed. We already generally subsidize power plants, but for other large projects it could provide both funding and oversight of the build.
When it comes to really large companies themselves, if there’s a cap then they would just stop being such large companies, not be taken over.
But if you wanted to make a process for a company to grow beyond the $1B cap, I could see a system where depending on the level of impact to peoples’ lives, either something like monthly reporting of financials and business plans, or for companies operating in areas with a higher potential for harms, something closer to a Fannie Mae-style conservatorship, that would directly advise the company on minimizing risks (and potentially actually prohibit actions outright if they clearly were harmful). Ownership, stocks, profit, etc, would all still be private. We actually already embed IRS auditors in companies if they’re caught doing tax evasion, and I think of this more as a logical extension of that. We’ve tried voluntary compliance with laws and regulations, and too many of the very large companies are happy to flout them, and use their wealth to help them do so.