Shinegaspro

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Shinegaspro

Shinegaspro

@Shinegaspro

Never buy a disposable propane tank again. ⚡ 60-sec refills • Military-grade brass • Zero leaks • 12,000+ happy customers 🔥

England, United Kingdom Katılım Mayıs 2026
116 Takip Edilen1 Takipçiler
Shinegaspro
Shinegaspro@Shinegaspro·
@mrramibanna @stripe @stripe Our company pays 20% in taxes, and whenever we subscribe to anything, we also pay 20% tax. In the end, Stripe closes our account directly before we can even connect it to our store. We may take legal action because we pay taxes, so we should be able to benefit from this
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Rami Banna
Rami Banna@mrramibanna·
Stripe Projects turns a network of dev tools into infrastructure that agents can use immediately. Provision databases, hosting, auth, analytics, AI, email, observability, and more from the terminal. We're shipping daily - this week: agent skills, project pull, shareable stacks, and more... 🧵
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Shinegaspro
Shinegaspro@Shinegaspro·
@stripe @yasser_elsaid_ @chatbase Our company pays 20% in taxes, and whenever we subscribe to anything, we also pay 20% tax. In the end, Stripe closes our account directly before we can even connect it to our store. We may take legal action because we pay taxes, so we should be able to benefit from this service,
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Shinegaspro
Shinegaspro@Shinegaspro·
@stripe @jeff_weinstein @jrfarr @kevinyien @hazelcough @BackseatVC Our company pays 20% in taxes, and whenever we subscribe to anything, we also pay 20% tax. In the end, Stripe closes our account directly before we can even connect it to our store. We may take legal action because we pay taxes, so we should be able to benefit from this service,
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Shinegaspro
Shinegaspro@Shinegaspro·
@stripe @phuctm97 @marclou @jackfriks I have been working with this company for more than 5 years now, and my store has processed more than 1 million dollars. But when we opened a new account, it was closed without any reason. This is the worst service I have ever seen. There is no support explaining where the proble
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Minh-Phuc Tran
Minh-Phuc Tran@phuctm97·
Finally met the two rockstar indie hackers @marclou & @jackfriks in person after knowing them for probably years on X! The two were underdogs for years but kept grinding until they become massively successful like nowadays. Lots to learn & be inspired from these folks. 🫡
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Shinegaspro
Shinegaspro@Shinegaspro·
@stripe @johncoogan How am I supposed to sell this inventory when you closed my account without any issue or explanation? Please clearly explain what the problem is instead of only closing my account.
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Shinegaspro
Shinegaspro@Shinegaspro·
@stripesupport Thank you. I will wait for your response. We have been working with Stripe for more than 5 years and have processed over $1M in sales. Our store is 100% verified, so it is very difficult for us to understand why our account was closed immediately after opening it.
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Shinegaspro
Shinegaspro@Shinegaspro·
@patrickc @_brianpotter Our company has generated more than $1M in sales, and most of those transactions were processed through Stripe. Now, when we open a new account, it gets closed immediately. I would like to understand the reason for this.
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Patrick Collison
Patrick Collison@patrickc·
I think the YIMBY movement employs an inadvertently dishonest sleight-of-hand in talking about "Paris-scale density". Well, fine, if we're talking about Paris-style building, I'm all for it, and likely voters would be too (as they have been in the past). But what is actually on offer is quite different: they wisely interpret calls for "Paris-scale density" as something more like "Sejong City-scale density".
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Shinegaspro
Shinegaspro@Shinegaspro·
@patrickc @s8mb Our company has generated more than $1M in sales, and most of those transactions were processed through Stripe. Now, when we open a new account, it gets closed immediately. I would like to understand the reason for this.
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Shinegaspro
Shinegaspro@Shinegaspro·
@patrickc @link Our company has generated more than $1M in sales, and most of those transactions were processed through Stripe. Now, when we open a new account, it gets closed immediately. I would like to understand the reason for this.
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Patrick Collison
Patrick Collison@patrickc·
We just launched the @Link CLI: github.com/stripe/link-cli. Tell your friendly neighborhood agent about it -- agents can use the Link CLI to create single-use credentials that you get to synchronously approve each time. I asked Claude to buy itself a gift. It chose HTTPZine on Gumroad.
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Shinegaspro
Shinegaspro@Shinegaspro·
@patrickc Our company has generated more than $1M in sales, and most of those transactions were processed through Stripe. Now, when we open a new account, it gets closed immediately. I would like to understand the reason for this.
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Patrick Collison
Patrick Collison@patrickc·
Stripe Atlas just hit 100,000 all-time incorporations. Q1 2026 is +130% Y/Y.
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Shinegaspro
Shinegaspro@Shinegaspro·
@patrickc Our company has generated more than $1M in sales, and most of those transactions were processed through Stripe. Now, when we open a new account, it gets closed immediately. I would like to understand the reason for this.
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Patrick Collison
Patrick Collison@patrickc·
Thank you to everyone who joined us at Stripe Sessions this year! More than 10,000 attendees for the first time. We had a ton of fun putting everything together and are very proud to support everything that you are building.
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Shinegaspro
Shinegaspro@Shinegaspro·
@patrickc Our company has generated more than $1M in sales, and most of those transactions were processed through Stripe. Now, when we open a new account, it gets closed immediately. I would like to understand the reason for this.
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Patrick Collison
Patrick Collison@patrickc·
I think this reflects our confused spiritual relationship with our own past. We feel a strong and intuitive affinity for what we used to build, while our contemporary frameworks consider such buildings misguided and "immoral". The mind says massing prohibitions and setbacks; the heart says beautiful masonry, higgeldy-piggeldy layouts, and Victorians. Rather than resolve the tension, we designate large fractions of our city ontologically confused, simultaneously protected and illegal; sanctified and condemned.
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Patrick Collison@patrickc

I'm interested in "trapped buildings": those that couldn't be built today (because of zoning and code changes) but also can't be substantially modified or demolished (because of historic protection rules). One of those phenomena that really makes one wonder what exactly we're trying to do. Has anyone ever estimated what fraction of buildings in major cities fall into this category? When I asked Claude about San Francisco, it concluded: "If forced to give a single number with a single confidence rating: roughly 100,000 buildings — about two-thirds of San Francisco's physical structures — sit in the trap as a practical matter. Confidence: moderate. The number could be 70,000 or 130,000 depending on how strictly you operationalize "can't be substantially modified.""

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Shinegaspro
Shinegaspro@Shinegaspro·
@patrickc @pietergaricano @paulkrugman Our company has generated more than $1M in sales, and most of those transactions were processed through Stripe. Now, when we open a new account, it gets closed immediately. I would like to understand the reason for this.
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Patrick Collison
Patrick Collison@patrickc·
Luis (and @pietergaricano) are correct below, and @paulkrugman is much too sanguine about Europe's challenges. As it happens, the same wealth point that Luis mentions also struck me when I traveled to Nashville a few weeks ago.
Luis Garicano 🇪🇺🇺🇦@lugaricano

We stopped everything to write an answer (link below) to Paul Krugman's two posts of today (one informal, one with a simple model) arguing that Europe is broadly not falling behind the United States. The change measured by the Draghi report, he argues, is mostly due to growth in the technology industry, which has distorted GDP numbers without actually leading to higher standards of living. We should believe our eyes when we walk around France and walk around Mississippi. Krugman is wrong. The measures he uses understate European stagnation. This matters enormously. Divergence with the United States is the strongest evidence for reform in Europe. 1. The growth numbers Krugman compares the United States, France, and Germany at purchasing power parity in current prices. On that measure, France's and Germany's position relative to America has been roughly constant since 2000. But current price comparisons miss productivity gains in sectors where prices fall. If America produces twice as much software while the price of each unit halves, the value of American software output looks unchanged even though the volume has doubled. Most economists therefore use constant prices, which fix the base-year PPP level and apply each country's real output growth on top of it. American output growth has concentrated in tech, where prices have fallen tremendously as productivity rises. In terms of the volume of things produced, America has pulled away from Europe. 2. Is it all the tech industry? Krugman concedes this tech divergence but says it is not welfare-relevant. The American growth lead is an accounting artefact of measuring more iPhones at base-year prices, not a sign that Americans are actually richer, because Europeans buy the same iPhones at the same world prices. This is not the right way to think about the world today, as an earlier Paul Krugman would have argued. His model assumes tradable goods, interchangeable workers, marginal-cost pricing, and no profits. Each assumption fails. Most of what households buy is non-tradable: housing, healthcare, childcare, education. When American tech firms bid workers from haircutting to coding, American haircut wages rise. Germany has no growing tech sector to do the bidding, so German wages stay flat. Technology is not priced at marginal cost. Apple's margins are around 40 percent. Anthropic's inference margins are at 70 percent. The major platforms enjoy network effects, switching costs, and lock-in that hold prices well above what a competitive market would deliver. A large share of the productivity gains in technology stays as profit. A lot of the value of American technology dominance shows up in equity, not in wages. Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Alphabet, Meta, and Amazon together are worth $21 trillion, more than the entire combined stock market value of all European stock markets. Around 60 percent of US equity is held by American households. The median French or Spanish household holds almost no equity. The median employee at Meta, a company with almost 80,000 employees, earned $388,000 in 2025. This advantage is not going to go away. Krugman's own 1991 paper, cited in his Nobel prize, showed that comparative advantage in modern industries is produced by increasing returns to scale, specialized labor markets, supplier networks and the agglomeration of suppliers, workers, and ideas in particular places. Once an industry concentrates somewhere, the concentration is self-reinforcing. Europe is being pushed away from the next round of technology industries (AI!). 3. What about inequality? Another retort is that GDP per capita hides substantial inequality, and so even if America is rich on average, this is mostly due to the super wealthy. But despite the US's high pre-tax income inequality, it also achieves higher median incomes than Europe, in part because of such a high base, and in part because it actually redistributes more than many European countries. The cleanest comparison is median equivalised disposable household income: income after cash taxes and transfers, adjusted for household size and purchasing power. According to the OECD's 2021 numbers, the median American earns 30 percent more than the median Dutchman, about 31 percent more than the median German, and about 52 percent more than the median Frenchman. 4. What about hours worked? Krugman points out that while American GDP per person is higher, most of this is because Americans work more. For this divergence to be an hours worked story, Americans must work more relative to Europeans now than they did in 2000. The opposite has happened. Birinci, Karabarbounis, and See in a 2026 NBER paper show that about half of the American-European hours gap that existed in the 1990s has reversed by the end of the 2010s. Americans work fewer hours per person than they did in 2000, while most Europeans work more. 5. Is America not a bad place to live? Walk around Alabama and France: surely the former cannot be substantially richer than the latter? American cities often have poorer centres and richer suburbs or exurbs. European cities preserve richer and more attractive historic cores. A visit to a city as a tourist in America compared with a city in France will leave one having seen different spots on the income distribution. Americans in Europe go to the nicest and richest European cities. Rather than a walking around test, do a driving around test. Go to the periphery of any modern American city and see a level of new-built material wealth that is extremely uncommon in Europe, with thousands of enormous four- or five-bedroom homes. In the South, in places like Nashville and Austin, drive around the downtowns to see hundreds of luxury apartment buildings springing from the ground. This construction boom is replicated virtually nowhere in Europe today. The other question is generational. Housing often costs more in Europe than in the United States, despite the quality of the housing stock generally being much better. Europe has nice city cores but these are inaccessible to young Europeans. Consider the salaries available to entry-level workers. The starting pay for a London police officer is $57,000. In Washington, DC, $75,000. The entry-level Deloitte consultant job in Madrid pays around €28,000, roughly $33,000 per year. In Charlotte, the entry-level Deloitte job pays $63,000. There are many things to dislike about life in America. But relative to 25 years ago, the gap in material wealth has shifted dramatically in America's favor. siliconcontinent.com/p/european-sta…

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Shinegaspro
Shinegaspro@Shinegaspro·
@RuxandraTeslo @patrickc @WorksInProgMag @stripe Our company has generated more than $1M in sales, and most of those transactions were processed through Stripe. Now, when we open a new account, it gets closed immediately. I would like to understand the reason for this.
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Ruxandra Teslo 🧬
Ruxandra Teslo 🧬@RuxandraTeslo·
Thrilled to announce I'm joining @WorksInProgMag and @stripe to continue my research and writing on clinical trials & biotech innovation, with many more articles to come. (If you haven't already, subscribe to the magazine. It's great in terms of content and very beautiful.) My work is driven by a core conviction: in the years and decades ahead, we will be far more constrained by the quality of our culture and institutions than by technology itself. In biology, a remarkable convergence is underway. AI, alongside a wave of other emerging tools, is fundamentally expanding what science can do. But beneath this sizzling potential, something is going wrong in Western biotechnology. China is pulling ahead and companies are increasingly moving clinical trials there, drawn by faster clinical trial timelines and a more dynamic ecosystem. Promising therapies sit in limbo for years. Despite the science being here, personalized cancer therapies are not viable to anyone but a few who can afford to navigate the labyrinthine regulatory apparatus. And pharmaceutical R&D productivity has remained stubbornly flat in the last 10 years, after decades of decline. And I can't imagine a better home for my research and writing on what can be done to accelerate biomedical progress than Works in Progress. This is a magazine that has published some of the most important writing on why the physical world has stopped working, including "The Housing Theory of Everything," which became one of those rare pieces that actually changed how people think about a problem. But this is not just about my desire to study biotech innovation. Biotech is not an anomaly. The same pattern: technology outrunning the institutions meant to govern it, is playing out across society. And now AI is compressing the timeline, accelerating pressures that were already straining the system. When people ask what I worry about when it comes to AI, I tell them it’s not the usual things. I'm not losing sleep as much over AI taking my job. I am more worried that we will lose our appetite for depth and that long-form thought, serious reading, sustained attention, the very things that make culture worth having, will erode faster than we notice. That our collective intelligence will hollow out, gradually. And the very problems we have now will only accelerate. @WorksInProgMag is a resistance movement against that, condensed in the form of magazine. It stands for long-form, in-depth writing. It stands for beauty. It is fundamentally anti-slop. In that sense, it's a natural fit with @stripe. A payments company publishing a magazine might seem like an odd pairing. That is, until you understand what kind of payments company @stripe actually is. It has always been driven by a genuine passion for craft and for getting small things exactly right. I am really proud to be part of something that embodies my own values in such a deep way, especially at a turning point in history.
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Shinegaspro
Shinegaspro@Shinegaspro·
@patrickc Our company has generated more than $1M in sales, and most of those transactions were processed through Stripe. Now, when we open a new account, it gets closed immediately. I would like to understand the reason for this.
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Patrick Collison
Patrick Collison@patrickc·
Spotted in the lobby of the Guardian Building in Detroit. Compared to today's more common "financial services", "financial service" is quite evocatively different. The Guardian Building was built for the Union Trust Company in 1929 and I think it is my favorite of the Detroit skyscrapers. The lobby is quite strikingly weird -- a good reminder of how strange a lot of 1920s aesthetics were.
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Shinegaspro
Shinegaspro@Shinegaspro·
@patrickc Our company has generated more than $1M in sales, and most of those transactions were processed through Stripe. Now, when we open a new account, it gets closed immediately. I would like to understand the reason for this.
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Patrick Collison
Patrick Collison@patrickc·
Detroit impressions: • The downtown is full of beautiful buildings. All of them seem to have been built specifically in the 1920s. I guess that is after the city had accumulated enough auto wealth but before the twin hits of Modernism and the Depression. (I hadn't known that the GM Renaissance Center, built as a revitalization project, was at the time the largest private development in US history, and also at the time the world's tallest hotel. It may be large, but it is not pretty.) The downtown is surprisingly depopulated -- both the streets and the sidewalks feel empty. That said, it didn't feel at all unsafe. There are lots of great homes in the suburbs. • The Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation is amazing, and it's worth visiting Detroit for it alone. Among many (many) other things, it contains the oldest known surviving steam engine in the world, the actual Montgomery bus on which Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat, a deconstructed Model T, a deconstructed Eames Chair, and many great cars, agricultural equipment, locomotives, industrial specimens, and more. (They have the Lincoln Continental that JFK was riding in when assassinated -- which, apparently, was returned to service and used by several subsequent presidents.) • The museum made me wonder why American car design peaked in the mid-60s. (This fact is very evident at the museum.) The LLMs blame the 1966 National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act. (Not quite wtfhappenedin1971.com, but close.) • Good food exists but it is hard to find. • The Heidelberg Project also exists and is unique. • We stayed at the Dearborn Inn, which is wonderful, and contains cottages modeled after the homes of significant American figures. Dearborn (and Hamtramck) are now predominantly Muslim, apparently for reasons that go back a century to Henry Ford's $5 wage. Dearborn felt noticeably prosperous (we stopped for coffee at a fancy Japanese cheesecake cafe); Hamtramck did not. • Michigan.gov says that the Hispanic population of Michigan is just 6%. Coming from California, the absence is very striking. • The Detroit Institute of Arts is remarkable, particularly the room with the American landscapes and the section with the Dutch masters (especially The Visitation). An obvious question is why there is nothing quite like it in the Bay Area given how much richer the latter is than Detroit ever was -- we techies are just so uncultured by comparison. The Diego Rivera murals are amazing (and quite strange; you can see why they were controversial). • Detroit is full of historic plaques -- they are truly everywhere. This is presumably due in part to the fact that Detroit has a lot of history, but it still has many more than places with comparable historical depth. Some research suggests that it might be related to generous tax credits for historic preservation. Whether or not that is true, Detroit persuades me that other places should engage in more plaquemaxxing. • I recommend a visit! You overall leave with some sense for how exciting America must have felt in the early 20th century.
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Shinegaspro
Shinegaspro@Shinegaspro·
@stripe @patrickc I’ve been your merchant since 2021, processed £230,000+. I submitted ALL required documents for my new store. Account closed the SAME DAY with ZERO explanation. I am a legitimate UK registered business. I just want to know WHY. Please review my case. 🙏
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Shinegaspro
Shinegaspro@Shinegaspro·
@stripe @patrickc I’ve been your merchant since 2021, processed £230,000+. I submitted ALL required documents for my new store. Account closed the SAME DAY with ZERO explanation. I am a legitimate UK registered business. I just want to know WHY. Please review my case. 🙏 #Stripe
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