you're right, people can't. If you want shot at a significant chunk of a multi billion dollar sale you start your own company. As the github founders did.
If you want up be paid $x a fortnight right from the get go then you get a job.
I don't see how the success of people who chose to do A means people that did B got screwed, just because they both worked on the same project. The decisions they made and context of their choosing to work on it were still different things each with their own pros and cons
Unless there was some more to it. Like share /options shenanigans that might not be legally fraud but fraud in spirit. No one seems to be saying that happened here though.
> If you want shot at a significant chunk of a multi billion dollar sale you start your own company. As the github founders did.
False dichotomy. People join startups (esp. early ones) thinking they have a shot at a significant chunk. But even for the very first employees, the equity numbers are ridiculously small. I don't understand why they sign up for it.
All my friends in startups work damn hard and poured huge chunks of their lives into it, and it has not been fun watching them be offered meager positions post-acquisition, while their founder/CEOs get multi-million paydays.
That is why you get paid for your time, and it is probably a lot. Leave work at work and move on when it is time. It's just a job. Those founders did much more than the people you know. They took a massive risk at complete failure
Does those people being wrong mean anything from a moral /rightness / "getting screwed" perspective? I make mistakes like anyone else, sometimes pretty big ones to the tune of quite a lot of money. Wouldn't say I've been screwed though. I just fucked up.
If you want up be paid $x a fortnight right from the get go then you get a job.
I don't see how the success of people who chose to do A means people that did B got screwed, just because they both worked on the same project. The decisions they made and context of their choosing to work on it were still different things each with their own pros and cons
Unless there was some more to it. Like share /options shenanigans that might not be legally fraud but fraud in spirit. No one seems to be saying that happened here though.