freesia
200 posts

freesia
@Freesiagaul
i make vr stuff - tracking and haptics atm • mit news (cause 19) • forbes • EE bitch

"mate sometimes I wonder if I should just go ahead and make a H game" "I honestly just assumed you were" 😭 x.com/vr_hai/status/…





My mission this year is to convince leaders at Meta to wave their 30% tax for small VR developers on their first $500k in revenue. It is stunting the content ecosystem at this delicate phase of VR. For a small team, the difference between $10k and $7k per month is the difference between continuing to work on their app and giving up on VR. For Meta, $3k/month in lost revenue from a few dozen developers doesn’t really change the P&L, but it returns 100x in terms of content ecosystem diversity and vibrancy. Keeping devs in the arena is how you get the next Gorilla Tag or Beat Saber. @boztank @GabeAul please consider it?

Larry and Sergey can’t stay in California since the wealth tax as written would confiscate 50% of their Alphabet shares. Each own ~3% of Alphabet's stock, worth about $120 billion each at today's ~$4 trillion market cap. But because their shares have 10x voting power, the SEIU-UHW California billionaire tax would treat them as owning 30% of Alphabet (3% × 10 = 30%). That means each founder's taxable wealth would be $1.2 trillion. A 5% wealth tax on $1.2 trillion = $60 billion tax bill, each. That's 50% of their actual Alphabet holdings—wiped out by a "5%" tax. Section 50303(c)(3)(C) of the 2026 Billionaire Tax Act states: "For any interests that confer voting or other direct control rights, the percentage of the business entity owned by the taxpayer shall be presumed to be not less than the taxpayer's percentage of the overall voting or other direct control rights." This means if a founder holds shares representing only 3% of economic interest but 30% of voting control (through Class B supervoting shares), the tax would presume their ownership stake is at least 30% for valuation purposes, not 3%. The wealth tax is poorly defined and designed to drive tech innovation out of California.














