Cecosesola.
Apparently. But it seems like it only happened around the beginning after the second spike it stabilized for some reason.
accounts in total.
Fair enough
That happened in March 2024 I think. And Reddit filed for the IPO in December 2023.
https://www.reuters.com/markets/deals/reddit-seeks-launch-ipo-march-sources-2024-01-18/
Honestly I already believe that this has happened.
My reason for thinking this is because of this:
The spike that happened on October 2023 after the initial spike that happened due to the Reddit protests seems unnatural to me.
Someone gave the explanation of the release of the mobile clients but even then I wouldn't think it would lead to a spike equivalent to the initial one since it would mostly just be people using an account they already had instead of creating a new one.
Like honestly if someone knows what event happened then that made so many new users join I'd appreciate it.
depends on incubation time. Again all of this is hypothetical we won't know how bad it is until it actually happens.
No those don't exist anymore.
History often rhymes.
Then how did the two doctors get it?
Edit: Just read the article more closely and the grammar behind it isn't really clear.
Two doctors and six staff members from the Regional Poultry Farm
This could mean either
A) The doctors and staff members are from the poultry farm.
or
B) The doctors are from the hospital and staff members are from the poultry farm.
I assumed B but I could be wrong.
From what I understood after I watched it and looked into it a bit more is that individuals have roles within the organization and are able to decide their own actions on how to fulfill that role. The actions are informed by the collective understanding of their goals and norms that are formed during their frequent meetings (which are very different in vibes from regular corporate meetings).
This is how I understood it works for most decisions but there a few decisions that fall back on voting which after the vote occurs the individuals are expected to carry out whatever was voted on.
So like it says in the video it is a largely informal structure but one that seems to work very well.