A catch phrase will go here soon.

my response to Mike @arrington’s slam of @color

4/30/2011

my comment: 

Love you Mike…. but:

1. This is an unfair slam job designed as weekend link bait  
2. Completely incorrect analysis of the technology business

Facebook started as a hot or not knock off and iterated to success. They really didn’t hit big success until image hosting and the app platform took off.  

Putting an unfinished product in the market and iterating on it worked pretty well for Microsoft didn’t it? I mean, the first version of Windows was a run time that could only run one app. It went on to be the best selling operating system of all time. Microsoft Word sucked for three versions…. the took 99% market share in word processing.

I expect #1 (and in fact salute your link-baiting skills), but you’re way off base that their not doing the right thing by trying everything under the sun. Swinging and pivoting is the name of the game. 

Look forward to brunch tomorrow!

best jason 

I always say being a great manager is repeating yourself–HBR reports on study saying its true.

4/28/2011
Img-20110428-00030

Disturbing amazon web services thread re: heart monitoring down

4/24/2011
https___forums.aws.amazon.com_thread.jspa Download this file

the crowdsourced rally fighter on This Week in Startups today! 1PM thisweekin.com

4/19/2011
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COOL COMMERCIAL: The Power of Words

4/17/2011

Mahalo is experimenting with live teaching: free tax advice

4/16/2011
Mahalo is experimenting with live teaching: free tax advice
http://www.ustream.tv/channel/mahalo-s-live-tax-chat

Not sure this is a business, but I know it’s cool! :-)

Breaking: CEO of @SharesPost: @wallstreetjournal is lying

4/16/2011

From: “SharesPost Announcement” <admin@sharespost.com>
Date: Sat, 16 Apr 2011 11:08:17 +1000
Subject: Message from Dave Weir, CEO of SharesPost

SharesPost

Dear SharesPost Member,

On Tuesday of this week, a columnist from the Wall Street Journal named Dennis Berman published an article that badly misrepresented our company’s policies and procedures and was based on questionable journalistic ethics. His story was based on results he contrived by submitting false information as part of our Accredited Investor vetting process. He defended his actions by saying that he is in “the business of truth telling.” Unfortunately, though, his article omits large portions of the truth.

The fact is that Mr. Berman’s “test” confirmed that our qualification system works. Our broker and electronic systems detected his fraud and barred him from our platform within six hours of submitting his fraudulent information and long before he would have been able to execute trades. Somehow that fact was treated as a mere footnote to the story, leaving readers largely misinformed and our company unfairly maligned.

Other facts about our compliance system that were left out of the story:

  • Mr. Berman failed to mention that his fraud only enabled him to view information on our site. Had he attempted to transact, he would have been required to undergo a second level of compliance review and direct dialogue with one of SharesPost’s FINRA registered brokers;
  • Had he actually entered into agreements with a seller, those agreements would have required him to make multiple contractual representations to the seller, the company and SharesPost that he had provided accurate information and was in fact an Accredited Investor;
  • Had he actually entered into a contract to purchase shares, the transaction would have been processed by U.S. Bank, a third party escrow agent, which first verifies buyers’ and sellers’ identities by collecting all the documents required under the Patriot Act and Anti-Money Laundering regulations.

SharesPost has invested heavily in building its marketplace and has established processes and procedures that meet and often exceed the highest standards of market practice. For the sake of some glib one-liners and a pre-determined “gotcha” story that he was determined to write, Mr. Berman lied about who he was and ignored and embellished the facts to suit his story line. We think the Wall Street Journal can and should do better.

Sincerely,

David Weir
Chief Executive Officer
SharesPost, Inc.

Securities offered through Emerson Equity LLC, member FINRA, MSRB and SIPC.

IMPORTANT: The information contained in this email and/or its attachments is confidential. If you are not the intended recipient, please notify the sender immediately by reply and immediately delete this message and all its attachments. Any review, use, reproduction, disclosure or dissemination of this message or any attachment by an unintended recipient is strictly prohibited. Neither this message nor any attachment is intended as or should be construed as an offer, solicitation or recommendation to buy or sell any security or other financial instrument. Neither the sender, his or her employer nor any of their respective affiliates makes any warranties as to the completeness or accuracy of any of the information contained herein or that this message or any of its attachments is free of viruses.

If you would like us to not send emails like this one to you in the future, please click here to begin the unsubscribe process. Nothing in this email represents an offer to buy or sell any securities. SharesPost is a passive information and communications platform and is not a broker-dealer, exchange or investment advisor.

© 2011 SharesPost, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Famous shot of the grandkids… Can you guess which one is me?

4/14/2011
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Take care grandma, you were one of a kind!

4/14/2011
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Ny’s bravest say goodbye to grandma–a fireman’s wife

4/14/2011
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English Bulldog

Hello, my name is Jason. Welcome to my blog on the interwebs. You can reach me on twitter @jason and by email at jason@calacanis.com. My Skype is jasoncalacanis, and my mobile phone is 310-456-4900.

I only pick up numbers I recognize, and in terms of emailing me, the best strategy is to write short, blunt and to the point requests. I can quickly respond to short messages, and many times I simply don't have the time to read five page pitches. In terms of taking meetings, I only do that after reviewing an actual product (not a business plan). So, the best time to ping me is when you have mockups or an alpha site. I don't read business plans, and I've never written one.

Other twitter accounts you can follow: Video Games, Open Angel Forum, and LAUNCH Conference & Newsletter

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