Reddit kind of anticipates this critique in its investor docs, and argues that it didn’t really start operating as a serious business until 2018 when it finally started “meaningful monetization efforts” — that is, trying to make money for real.

But that’s still six years ago. What has Reddit been doing since then?

One big, obvious answer: It has been hiring a lot of engineers and spending a lot of money on their salaries…

…What am I missing? I asked Reddit comms for comment but they declined, citing the company’s quiet period before the IPO.

Internet Archive capture

  • Jagermo@feddit.de
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    4 months ago

    And 193 mio for the CEO, that’s a lot of dickpill ads they need to sell…

    • Perhyte@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      And, interestingly, they lost $91 million last year. If the CEO had instead earned $100 million last year, the company have made a multi-million dollar profit (if only just). If it had been $10 million (still way overpaid for any single person, I’d argue), they’d be nearing the hundreds-of-millions-per-year profit scale.

      I’ll never understand companies paying their CEOs hundreds of millions while they’re losing money hand over fist…

      • Serinus@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Not quite. He’s paid mostly in stock, not cash.

        Still an absurd amount of cash for a single person in a single year. You can effectively own most people for $4,000,000 (40 years at $100k a year.)

        This guy is making half a million every single day. Imagine buying someone else’s life’s work every week.

        Or, optionally, he could buy a nice house every single day.

        Ultimately, cash is a measure of what society owes you.

        One person simply can not produce the amount of effort that should be required to earn that amount of debt from society.