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I have a few of these posts I've written coming out over the next few months that I want people to discuss. Would you prefer I add a disclaimer at the top? Easy enough to add


Personally, I'd say you should definitely add a disclaimer, otherwise a discussion that would likely gain traction is that the information might be being intentionally concealed.


I will add them in subsequent posts. The information is all over our site (they are on our portfolio page, and we wrote about them when we invested) but I am happy to reiterate on each post for each company


Why can't it be added to this post?

The resistance to a seemingly obvious correction seems a little shady. Expecting people to dig around a site to find out your position of financial interest is not reasonable.

Such behavior is disappointing, especially from a top HN account holder.

It's too bad, because otherwise there are some interesting ideas, but TFA is lacking in good faith.


Added! Had signed off for the day


Thanks, sorry my post wasn't more charitable! My bad.


If you care about ethics of journalism then yes you should obviously disclose a financial interest in what you write.


I don't think a post on a VC blog of all places should be considered "journalism"


You're nitpicking the term "journalism" here, but even in casual conversation if a friend went on and on about how great a company was and then I later found out that they:

* Got paid a referral fee if I signed up

* Owned shares in the company

* Even was roommates with the founders/CEO but failed to mention it

I would trust that person less going forward.

If you want to be perceived as trustworthy, then you shouldn't say things that you have a hidden interest in saying.


To be fair, the top of the post says "Portfolio Spotlight".


I don’t mean to suggest it’s not sleazy—I think it’s sleazy by default. VC writing is not to be trusted.


Joran from TigerBeetle!

Our investors (Spark, Amplify, Coil) are different to most, in that our partners are all highly technical.

Engineers, coders, CTOs who read the same research papers and attend the same technical conferences (CIDR, VLDB, SIGMOD, HYTRADBOI etc.).

In fact, that's how we met.


If modern journalists don't care about ethics, then why should a non-journalist, or anyone for that matter?




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