"Building a startup is like Someone who jumps off a cliff and builds a plane on the way down"
@reidhoffman
So here is what i have to ask, how can ethics/being fair be your priority while falling of a cliff? Imo this analogy is normalising the lack ethics in startups
cc @paulg
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Replying to @JovisJoseph_ @reidhoffman
In practice, the additional stress of starting a startup doesn't cause otherwise ethical people to behave unethically.
9 replies 9 retweets 145 likes -
Replying to @paulg @reidhoffman
It's curious that substantially no one worries that someone's ethics will necessarily slide while getting married, having kids, doing a medical residency, or competing in elite sporting events, but it is widely believed that startup stress possesses some unique corrupting factor.
12 replies 10 retweets 128 likes -
Replying to @patio11 @reidhoffman
It's a meme often resorted to by journalists who are either lazy or have an axe to grind (or both). Readers believe it because the growth rate of successful startups is so counterintuitively high that it seems like some form of cheating is needed to explain it.
3 replies 1 retweet 48 likes -
I remember one article in the NYT purporting to show a pattern of bad behavior by successful founders, and the reporter was so hard-pressed to find a third example that he had to use the fact that Parker Conrad got bad grades in college.
3 replies 0 retweets 35 likes -
In my experience (and I have a lot of data about both), journalists writing about startups cut more ethical corners than the founders they write about.
1 reply 4 retweets 76 likes -
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Some journalists. Others are very upstanding. It depends on their own individual characters.
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