mOde pfp
mOde

@mode-nearchos

Ok, nice. Then what happens if a project doesn't meet the expected impact? What happens if the project doesn't come to the seeing the light of the day at all? Let's say you get the funding from investor (or a bank - this one sounds like a very far future tho). You try to build something. You don't succeed. Two questions here: - from a perspective of potential projects: you want to build public good, therefore you don't want to take some for-profit business risks, like letting down your VCs and having to refund them somehow. Is that really attractive to builders? - form a perspective of an potential investor: I invest my money, so I expect benefits and safety guards. In traditional business I get those. Do I get those in public goods then? Why should I choose public goods over the traditional startups if not?
1 reply
0 recast
1 reaction