Dayne Rathbone

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Dayne Rathbone

Dayne Rathbone

@DayneRathbone

Former idiot | Product researcher @Substack

Canberra, Australia Katılım Nisan 2010
410 Takip Edilen1.5K Takipçiler
Dayne Rathbone retweetledi
Substack
Substack@Substack·
"Write the way you talk. Naturally." - David Ogilvy
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ellis 🍔
ellis 🍔@hamburger·
What's actually working on Substack? "Perspective," says CEO @chrisbest "If you want to know some facts, you can ask Claude" More in today's access.show
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ellis 🍔
ellis 🍔@hamburger·
Biiiig ambitions from Substack's @chrisbest : "Our aspiration is having Substack become the intellectual and culture capital of the internet... ...and it feels like we're on track for that" more in today's access.show
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Alex Heath
Alex Heath@alexeheath·
Substack is opening up to AI At the ACCESS live show in SF last week, CEO @chrisbest revealed that MCP integration is coming soon. Also: His theory of AI slop, why YouTube is the real competition, and where independent media goes next. sources.news/p/substack-ope…
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tae kim
tae kim@firstadopter·
I don't think people realize the top Substack writers have FAR more reach and influence than legacy media. Another 1.4 million views day yesterday and I barely posted. We can also freely tell it like it is without the self-censoring and gatekeeping of corporate media bosses.
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Mills Baker
Mills Baker@millsbaker·
The toxicity issue at Facebook stemmed in my view from the absence of there being any other game to play there; there were few sincere, sustained technical missions (and those that existed created orgs with less toxicity); indeed, there were few missions of any kind!
Jeremy Bernier@jeremybernier

Meta was easily the most toxic company I've worked for. There's a reason the Chinese call it "Squid Game". Others refer to it as "Hunger Games" or "Lord of the Flies". I think they're all accurate. The company culture is basically every man/woman for themselves. The performance review process (PSC) not only doesn't incentivize helping others, if anything it actually discourages it since everyone is stack ranked against each other. Imagine working on a team where every 6 months, one of you is going to get axed. Of course it's going to become toxic. "Bottoms up" culture is a complete farce - it's just a way for leadership to offload accountability. The Tech Leads (TLs) have all the power - owning the relationships and tribal knowledge to gatekeep projects to their buddies. Managers are "people managers" with limited technical understanding, who basically aggregate TL feedback and create performance review packets to calibrate with other managers and IC7+. The takeaway is that your destiny is in the hands of the TLs, and TLs unlike managers have no responsibility for your career. There are no repercussions for unethical behavior. I've seen managers and TLs throw others under the bus and get away with it. The only mission bonding the company together is individual self-preservation. Save your own ass to survive for another stock vesting, and throw someone else under the bus if you need to. That's why layoffs rarely impact directors/VPs or tenured IC7+ despite the fact that they're paid by far the most. Even this recent mass layoff that was supposed to "flatten" managers layers barely affected directors/VPs/IC7+, and fell predominantly on M1s - the lowest rung of the management chain. The culture is extremely performative and focused on box ticking and optics. Everything is about PSC (the performance review system) and perception. This means tons of meetings, useless AI slop posts, and top-down initiatives that don't benefit anyone but maybe help tick off the impact box of some go-getter at the top. Impact is not enough - it has to have sufficient complexity. So complexity is added for complexity's sake. The org I was in (Facebook ads) is 90% Chinese, and the entire leadership chain up to the VP level is Chinese. Mandarin is the primary language at the office, except in official meetings with non-speakers. Chinese work culture is very different from American work culture, with 996 (9am-9pm, 6 days/week), top-down nature, emphasis on saving face (eg. don't question your superiors), and toxicity being quite common. Naturally when an org is completely dominated by a single ethnicity that's notorious for not integrating, elements from their work culture seep in. Of the layoffs I witnessed in this org, 3/4 were not Chinese (just to be clear, most Chinese are very kind so don't take this as an attack. But it is a reality that I think most people outside this company are completely unaware of, and I question if leadership is even aware despite the fact that we're talking about the company HQ) I had the most toxic manager of my life here. I watched him deliberately set up a new hire to fail, driving them to needing to see a psychiatrist for anxiety + depression, and getting them fired. Then he suddenly disappeared for 8 months, before leaving the company. I could go on and on, but this is already pretty long and I think you get the point. Yes there are a lot of great, kind people here. I managed to transfer out of my first team into a new team with a great manager where everyone was very smart, supportive, and hardworking. But the company has its Squid Game reputation for a reason. Company culture comes from the top. It seems leadership is either too removed to notice, or maybe don't really care anymore because I guess they already made their billions and us plebs are expendable these days.

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Substack
Substack@Substack·
Open Tab Ep 3: @ashleevance on new media, getting close to Elon and showing audiences where the world is headed before it gets there. 00:00 "Elon might actually bankrupt me" 00:01:08 George Hotz joyride 00:07:09 Silicon Valley watering hole 00:09:00 They thought I was a woman 00:12:07 Life before and after the Elon biography 00:15:30 Monthly dinners with Elon 00:22:05 "95% accurate" 00:25:00 Elon said "I'm gonna destroy your life" 00:27:02 Kim Dotcom raid 00:27:30 Reconciling with Elon 00:29:49 Getting access to Neuralink 00:31:00 Bryan Johnson documentary 00:33:40 Funding movies 00:35:17 EVE Online 00:36:09 Hello World: Emmy nomination 00:37:18 Audience reach: Substack vs Bloomberg 00:38:39 PR people out of touch 00:40:13 65% of YouTube viewers watching on a TV 00:42:30 Ayahuasca on assignment 00:45:06 "I had the best job in media" 00:45:30 Started media company anyway
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Arram
Arram@arram·
Asked Claude: 'There's a meme called the "fix everything easily switch". What policies do you think are the best candidates for being a real fix everything switch in the US? Give me your top ten, your confidence, your reasoning, and why a given policy has not been implemented.'
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Mills Baker
Mills Baker@millsbaker·
THOUGHT EXPERIMENT: imagine that you like a lot of the Internet in terms of forms, cultures, experiences, memes, etc. but some rot at the heart of it seems to work against its healthy development, and major players who shape it seem not to be trying to make anything better.
philip lewis@Phil_Lewis_

Google Search as you know it is over "Instead of returning a simple list of links, Google Search will drop users into AI-powered interactive experiences at times." techcrunch.com/2026/05/19/goo…

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Substack
Substack@Substack·
400,000 people read his newsletter on media and markets, but Scott Galloway's most-read post ever was about his dog
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Dayne Rathbone@DayneRathbone·
@idhugham A Substack<>ICE collab kidnapped me and relocated me to the US, actually. Open to candidates willing to relocate, I believe.
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idam
idam@idhugham·
@DayneRathbone Hey this looks cool! Open to Australian candidates? I saw you’re based in Canberra
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