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A business model for patrick.net


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2022 Jun 26, 11:23am   3,686 views  55 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (60)   💰tip   ignore  

After seeing the rise and apparent viability of Substack, I think maybe patrick.net could compete in that space.

So patrick.net users could make some of their posts require payment in one way or another, either by subscription, or for a small per-article fee. It would just be an option if people want to try to make money.

A big benefit is that it would give the for-profit users a motive to spread the word about their "blog" here. And you all could perhaps make some money.

Some problems:

- payments can easily get cut off by the forces of censorship, though Substack apparently deals with that OK
- Substack has a lot of famous people on it. How did they do that? Substack looks more professional, so maybe that's one reason.
- Substack tends to charge way too much. I'm not about to pay $5/month for the 20 Substacks I read. So maybe there should be a $5/month subscription to patrick.net in general, and users could then use up that $5 a quarter at a time or so by "buying" individual posts which look worth reading.

Feedback appreciated. What would make it work?

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55   WookieMan   2022 Aug 2, 5:12am  

Patrick says

WookieMan says


You simply cannot track the finances of 300+ million people and probably 100+ million corps and other business entities. You'd need 5-10M employees for starters at the IRS.


This is another argument for Georgism. If there were no income tax or sales tax, but only a tax on land values, it would be pretty damn easy to track and collect. And the tax would all be public record because property taxes are public record.

Humans over complicate things. This will never end. It's the super rich and politicians that have the ability to utilize the loopholes. And yes we all can as well, but on say $100k it doesn't move the needle. We're talking $100M to 1B plus type stuff. Insider trading.

We all have best friends. My $100B company is going to do bad. The projections look like shit. You don't think I'm going to tell my buddy? Hell yes, so he shorts it. Same with a good quarter. You then kick it back through bogus contract and shit like that. This happens all the time.

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