Reddit Posts
XR products launched in CES 2024, technology IP innovation is expected to achieve a value leap
XR products launched in CES 2024, technology IP innovation is expected to achieve a value leap - Newstrail
How come you guys don't think that Disney will cease to exist entirely by early this year?
Peltz/Trian/Perlmutter are 100% confirmed to take over Disney entirely and that will cause the company to cease to exist entirely.
Tesla The Worst Investment You Can Make In 2024 - The Second Worst Investment Is Driving One
$DIS - The mega AI bull case for Disney
$LDSN~ Luduson Acquires Stake in Metasense. FOLLOW UP PRESS PENDING ...
Why the EU COMMISSION can't legally veto the Amazon and Irobot Merger/Acquisition. (All in 40k.)
Ampere vs LightShed: two conflicting outlooks on legacy media streaming services: Disney+, Max, Peacock & Paramount.
Was the Activision Blizzard actually beneficial for ATVI shareholders?
Aren't Nelson Peltz/Trian and Ancora the most beloved and well-respected by/among shareholders/investors in Wall Street?
Aren't Nelson Peltz/Trian and Ancora the most beloved and well-respected by/among shareholders/investors in Wall Street?
As I've said before, Disney will completely cease to exist early this year.
Disney will completely cease to exist early this year.
OTC : KWIK Shareholder Letter January 3, 2024
DigitalAMN Discusses Strategic Achievements and Initiatives In Key Areas
ARM is Worth $1000 - Everything Runs On ARM - What Doesn't WILL - 10 Year Play - X86 is DEAD
To sell or to hold Disney stock that has been granted to me as an employee
Bullet Blockchain Deploys 10 Licensed Bitcoin ATMs
Nvidia upgrades AI uprooting XR development, How it will be the future of tech-field
Comparison of Bandai Namco and its competitors
Comparison of Bandai Namco and its Competitors
Disney will completely cease to exist soon after this year.
Disney will completely cease to exist soon after this year.
Why doesn’t Amazon or apple buy paramount and lionsgate?
Bullish on CD Projekt RED ($OTGLY) ahead of 11.28 earnings. (Long post)
BULLISH on CD Projekt RED ahead of 11.28 earnings (Long)
Integrated Cyber Introduces a New Horizon for Cybersecurity Solutions Catering to Underserved SMB and SME Sectors (CSE: ICS)
A hidden gem in MedTech - Titan Medical Inc
Cannabis nurse with 20 years sales background seeking one Angel
Integrated Cyber Introduces a New Horizon for Cybersecurity Solutions Catering to Underserved SMB and SME Sectors (CSE: ICS)
ABQQ dd *MUST READ* Giant company, tiny market cap
ABQQ dd *MUST READ* giant company, tiny market cap
Why don't all stocks have an IPO price of $100, and moreover, are IPOs which drastically appreciates on the first day considered a failure (from the perspective of the investment bank that issued it)?
Curious to hear thoughts on why a company would withdraw an S3 early?
Top Five Reasons PODC will be a massive short squeeze
Affordable Nasdaq stocks have the same appeal as any other low-cost stocks.
1606 Corp. Provides Development Update on ChatCBD
$CBDW NEWS OUT. 1606 Corp. Provides Development Update on ChatCBD
As GPT-4 coming, Tech companies Promote the AIGC + 5000 IP content ecology
INTEL CORP’s ISREALI EXPOSURE…🔥🔥🔥 PUTS??
Hasbro ($HAS) hold the IP for both Monopoly Go and Baldur's Gate, reports at 10/26
Commercial Drone Market Predicted to Grow to $53.66 Billion by 2030: AETH's Innovative AI-Driven Approach in the Commercial Drone Industry
Pioneering Drone Technology Advancements Through Cutting-Edge AI Automation and Development Solutions: Aether Global Innovations (AETH.c)
Mining Penny Stock Watchlist (IMRFF, NGD, HYMC, KGC)
iMetal Resources Completes Digitally Enhanced Prospecting Survey on Its Gowganda West Project
Nvidia brings generative AI core upgrades; WiMi Hologram Cloud (WIMI) stimulates the AICG technology
$IMRFF (OTCQB) iMetal Resources Completes Digitally Enhanced Prospecting Survey on Its Gowganda West Project
$500/Million-share entertainment stock WILL SOAR on Union Strike Resolution!
$AVAI latest update on their patent portfolio
Sekur Private Data Ltd.'s SekurVPN Swiss Hosted, Privacy VPN Records Sales up over 100% Month-Over-Month
Sekur Private Data Ltd.'s SekurVPN Swiss Hosted, Privacy VPN Records Sales up over 100% Month-Over-Month
The Rise of Drone Usage and $AETH.c's Role in Drone Tech Development
Is Warner Bros Discovery Stock worth it?
Cybin has 2 phase 1 and 2 results being released soon, stock is looking primed to break out, huge upside potential
Can you track an IP address from an email? Or WhatsApp message or a Facebook messenger message? I’m getting scammed in crypto
$MLRT Completes Merger with Level 2 Security
WiMi Hologram Cloud (WIMI) to build a 5000 + IP system chasing metaverse industry
AETH's Innovative Approach: Transforming Drone Operations with AI & Automation
GBT Receives Patent Grant Notification Covering its Integrated Circuits Reliability Verification Analysis and Auto-Correction Technology
GBT Receives Patent Grant Notification Covering its Integrated Circuits Reliability Verification Analysis and Auto-Correction Technology
Is the cybersecurity space going to continue to grow?
On Fire: Top Artificial Intelligence Penny Stocks
DAMN.... I may have been wrong. $MULN. What to do??? Differences between a Scam and Fraud. 🚀🚀💣💣🔥🔥
Mentions
Yes and no. Yes as in Facebook was genuinely a groundbreaking product in some ways. No because they make all their money on ads. The fact that Zuck has personally interfered with trust and safety doesn’t make him some genius, just devoid of morals and lucky that he has a platform that has huge advertising traffic. Again the whole thing is Facebook and acquired IP. He hasn’t built one single thing after Facebook.
The site just changed over to defense ... I was looking at it yesterday and it looked like it did the last time the wayback machine captured it on March 19th. Today biomx.com is completely different. Mar 12th: Cloud flare DNS configured Mar 19th: Last Wayback capture Mar 31st: DFSL option agreement 8-K filed (SIGNAL) Apr 10th: Zorronet acquisition closed Apr 13th: DFSL definitive agreement 8-K filed ~Apr 10th - 17th: Site changes ... I have looked for any other DNS / IP changes I can find, but this is a close a I can get to the timeline. I was looking at the site yesterday and it was a biomed company. Today ... go look for yourself. [biomx.com](https://biomx.com) Yesterday: [it looked like this](https://web.archive.org/web/20260215191933/https://www.biomx.com/)
Did you see sales numbers already? They haven't been released. Capcom has also been dripping old IP releases. You could say it's priced in but historically it does run up to earnings in any case. If Pragmata breaks 3 million units then it paid for itself in development, which could happen based on the reviews.
They have old IP that is still selling. Resident Evil, Monster Hunter, and now Pragmata. They don't have the hardware constraint Nintendo does, namely ram.
This has several red flags that warrant caution before investing. The website uses high-pressure marketing tactics and promises of revolutionary technology without providing verifiable technical details or peer-reviewed research. I can't find any SEC filings, patent information, or legitimate news coverage about this company's supposed coal refining breakthrough. The investment structure they're promoting looks more like a private placement that isn't properly registered. Before putting money into any "revolutionary" technology claims, especially in traditional industries like coal, verify the company is properly registered and has actual IP/patents you can research. The energy sector has strict regulations for a reason.
Yes, his business. There is not $65M in the bank. There’s property, equipment, IP, etc.
>Just to name a few: First, the WASM edge itself reflects a deeper set of values about building quality software, they still have those values and we know the have the ability to execute on it because they have been already. But that's not a moat. You're tacitly describing what is effectively bankruptcy on the existing IP and a total reset. If your argument is that Figma has a culture of excellence, that's fine. But lots of companies have cultures of excellence and the paradigms are changing, so I'm not sure what that means for the stock. It could be worth zero, it could be worth infinity. Feels like the only certainty is uncertainty, if you catch my drift? >Number of iterations or commits or lines of code is not inherently predictive of quality software, there is no guarantee that infinite loops of LLM's iterating on code can ultimately produce a product with the quality of Figma with any degree of reliability (In fact I am highly skeptical of this and am of the belief that over time this will become more apparent. We're aligned on the core point that the LLM is a tool, and the tool still needs an artist. But you're still getting confused between the two different parallel discussions here: 1. Whether Figma itself is materially replicable in the age of agents. 2. Whether, in that same age of agents, anyone gives a shit about replicating Figma. The first question is interesting, but it doesn't matter one bit if the answer to the second question is a long-whistled no. >No, it's not. And no, LLM's are not demonstrating emergence. You're getting confused again here: Emergence just means something has behaviours that were not designed into that thing. See [emergent gameplay](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergent_gameplay). Yes, LLMs (they're not LLMs anymore, actually, as all major models have native multi-modality) have emergent characteristics and that's not in question at all — [the term zero-shot learning](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero-shot_learning) exists for this reason.
No, that’s not a good analogy. It’s more like a horse saddle company and a company making machines that will manufacture the horse saddles at a very low cost. The piece you’re missing is IP / patent and copyright law. Theoretically yes, if machines can do anything humans can do, can’t you just ask for machines to make you an iPhone? At low cost? So then why would Apple survive? The reason is Apple will still legally be the only one allowed to make iPhones that work with their OS and the cellular networks that are legally allowed to operate.
NFLX is such a garbage platform. They have zero compelling IP outside of what they’ve leased from other companies
Yeah this sounds like one of those “all red flags, no upside” situations. If people aren’t getting paid, IP is being lifted, numbers are unaudited, and it’s basically a pay-for-signals newsletter, that’s usually the cue to walk away and just use the free indicators and tools they copied from in the first place.
It’s a media company (with worthless IP) that’s still valued like a tech company.
Unless they expand into other markets, industries, or products. How can they double to 200? There's only so much population on the planet to sell subscriptions to. They would have to double their subscription price in that time frame. I like some of Netflix content, but I have already unsubscribe since it's been getting pricy. There isn't enough content to make it worth while for me and I rather just spend that time gaming. If they have a way for customers to fund shows that have been axed and they still control the IP. I would gladly chip in some money to resurrect some of my favorite show that never got a chance for an ending. Been wanting to get The OA resurrected.
Technically they already did, laid off all employees and closed all their stores, sold the brand IP and pivoted with the tattered corpse. If you mean they’re going to go bankrupt -again- … probably.
I bought $IP and $GIS along with $CAG this morning. I want to replace my $TLT position w divy stocks. I've already bought $T, and $VZ. I get the bear case on processed food stocks; but they're learning to run very efficiently. And if I can buy consumer staples at prices lower than 2020 COVID lows with today's inflation & get paid a divy to wait for a rebound, I can wait.
I once did a 6 way horse race including robo firms, self directed, cfp directed and a stock picker. All dialed up to max aggressive risk tolerance in a moderately bull market condition. It ran for 2 years concurrently and IP came in dead last. The cash drag is no joke. 2 years may or maybe be conclusive, but I was also testing the intengibles like interface, customer service and ease of use. I still like Schwab, just not their intelligent portfolio offering.
Thing is - they haven't actually bought any AI hardware yet. The 'announcement' they made is still just a proposal which has to be voted on by shareholders next month. Allbirds sold all their IP and inventory for $39M, and had a further $24M in cash reserves reported Q3 last year - they've probably burned through some of that cash reserve in the intervening time. So - their current investor pitch is that they're essentially a $50 million box of cash with a NASDAQ listing. They peaked at $200M market cap post-announcement, which is wild. It essentially valued 'being a NASDAQ listing' at 150 million dollars. It just reeks of a desperate attempt to temporarily pump the stock price up to dump on unassuming specu-vestors.
So, if I’m understanding correctly, they have literally no business and no IP. They are just a registered business entity, i.e., a shell company, with $50M and they thought their best way forward was to announce that they have a zero-baked plan to micro-copycat Coreweave?
exactly the same as far as I can tell. They sold off all their show related IP as well. Like this is essentially a completely new company right?
Ok, regardedness is back. Here is why I think XELB could be next. XELB is \~9M market cap ready to do the exact same clown dance. Ultra-micro shell with basically no real biz left. They’re a brand licensing shop (Halston, Judith Ripka, some influencer kitchen/pet lines). Going-concern issues. Asset-light: the only real value is some IP and licensing agreements they can dump to the highest bidder tomorrow (just like Allbirds offloaded the sneakers). Boom, clean NASDAQ shell. Tiny float (\~3.3M shares). Low liquidity = violent moves when the PR drops. Robert W. D’Loren (founder, Chairman & CEO of $XELB) is a serial Wall Street deal-maker. He’s done this exact move before: NexCen Brands + he led the recap/restructure of Candies Shoes straight into Iconix Brand Group. Capital markets background, guy knows how to play the markets: co-founded UCC Capital (debt/equity investments in IP companies). Managed $1B+ in assets at Fosterlane. Total career investments in 30+ branded consumer/media companies > $2B. He could be just regarded enough to try play this...
Well it was actually a decent arbitrage when they were basically liquidating their IP, I had a small amount in the 2s. The pivot to ai is hilarious and a far larger return than originally expected
Did anyone actually read it? $20 mil market cap company sells their IP for nearly $40m and stock rips. No shit
the offloaded the shoe division and IP, basically were left with just skeleton management and a bunch of debt. IDK how the fuck like 10 dudes in a office with several million dollars of debt yoke expect to actually do anything other than pump and dump for the next 3 days. Zero chance they do anything other than just pay down debt and pocket the rest.
Shoe company sold all their IP and announced they are going to use the money to buy then lease GPUs
Alphabet is the only AI that does everything from chips to AI models, btw broadcom uses Google IP while everybody is busy with AVGO this is the time to load up on Alphabet no second thoughts
Yeah I think so too. I am hoping in time that EnSilica considers a NASDAQ listing as if they were given their expertise, IP, partners, customers and prospects they would probably be trading 5x higher at least compared to now. For example one of their key competitors Satixfy was recently acquired by MDA Space for 13x revenue. EnSilica is currently trading at about 2x this financial year’s forecast revenue. If you are new to penny stocks, it is worth considering that smaller companies with potentially lower liquidity (i.e. a smaller volume of shares traded) it is always prudent in my opinion to consider a limit order when buying and selling, as the spreads can be wider than more actively traded shares. For me though EnSilica is potentially a long term investment so hopefully in time when I sell the share price will be far higher than now.
Fair points all around, and the Qualcomm comparison is actually the most interesting one you've raised. But it cuts both ways - nobody in 2000 looked at a cash-burning IP company with unproven silicon and called it a sure thing either. They got to spend 20 years in court because they had foundational IP in the standard before anyone cared. That's the argument here. On routing around the patents - standards allow alternatives in theory. But if Beammwave's architecture genuinely is the most power-efficient way to do digital beamforming at these frequencies, the practical alternative doesn't exist. Unproven, yes. But that's the specific bet. You've laid out why this is low probability better than anyone else in this thread. The only disagreement is whether $8M is a reasonable price for that probability. I think it is!
You clearly know the space. Let me try to respond as best as I can... **On "everyone is in 3GPP"** \- yes but not everyone gets cited by name in the moderator summary for specific technical input on evaluation methodology. There's a difference between submitting contributions and having the moderator adopt your framework. That's not nothing. **On the power/thermal point** \- this is the strongest point you've made, and I wont pretend it's solved. But Beammwave's distributed architecture is specifically designed to avoid centralizing the DSP load that kills traditional digital beamforming. The whole point is distributing complexity across the array rather than routing hundreds of Gbit/s to a central processor. Whether that actually closes the budget in a shipping UE is unproven - but it's not the same problem you're describing for conventional digital beamforming. **SEP** \- you're right that contribution, SEP is a long road and most companies don't make it. But Beammwave has 40+ patent families specifically covering distributed digital beamforming at mmWave. If the 6G standard moves toward digital beamforming, which the evaluation methodology they're helping write suggests it might, those patents become relevant regardless of who manufactures the chips. **On OEM in-house development** \- Apple and Qualcomm both build modems in-house and still pay SEP royalties. Building your own silicon doesn't let you escape essential IP, it just means you implement it yourself and license the patents The four-step path you outlined is real and most companies fail it. The bet is that Beammwave is specifically positioned to thread that needle - the right architecture, the right patents, at the right standardization moment. At $8M market cap, you're not paying for a sure thing. You're paying for the option :)
Lol, is this scam still going on You’re massively overestimating what “being in a 3GPP document” actually means. Everyone serious in wireless is in 3GPP. Apple, Qualcomm, Ericsson, etc. submit hundreds of contributions every cycle. Getting a “per Beammwave input” mention just means they said something relevant in a discussion, not that their IP becomes standard-essential or monetizable. There’s a huge gap between: \* contributing to a study item \* having your idea survive standardization \* owning SEP (standard-essential patents) \* actually collecting royalties at scale Most companies never make it past step 1–2. Now to the part nobody in these posts ever addresses: the actual implementation. Their whole pitch is distributed digital beamforming at mmWave in a UE. That sounds great until you try to close the power + thermal + complexity budget in a real device: \* multiple RF chains per element \* high-speed ADC/DAC (or equivalent constraints centrally) \* hundreds of Gbit/s internal data movement \* continuous beam tracking, calibration, coherence management All of that has to live inside a phone that’s already thermally constrained by the modem + application SoC. You don’t get to handwave that away with “digital solves analog problems”, you just move the cost into DSP, memory bandwidth, pilots, and power. And no, “duty cycle” doesn’t magically fix it. RF systems are dimensioned for worst-case combined scenarios (bad coverage, UL bursts, heat, blockage), not a friendly average case. If your architecture only works after smoothing everything out, it doesn’t work. On top of that: \* 6G timeline is \~2030+ -> years of burn before revenue \* $8M microcap -> dilution risk is basically guaranteed. It has happened, it will happen again. \* OEMs are building in-house -> you only win if your IP is unavoidable There’s zero evidence of that so far. No real UE design wins, no independent validation at scale, just demos and slides. So what’s the actual bet here? That a tiny Swedish company not only participates in 3GPP, but: 1. gets its approach into the standard 2. owns essential IP around it 3. survives long enough to monetize 4. beats incumbents who’ve dominated RF patents for decades That’s not a “catalyst play”. That’s a long-duration, low-probability lottery ticket dressed up with buzzwords like “6G” and “at the table”. Yeah… “the market hasn’t noticed” 🤣
Fair point, but Beammwave's patents aren't on the standard itself, they're on a specific digital beamforming implementation that's technically superior to anything else out there. If it's the most efficient way to hit 6G performance targets, manufacturers won't have a choice but to license. Same reason Apple still pays Qualcomm despite spending billions trying to avoid it. That's the entire bet IMO. Essential IP, not just influential IP.
The revenue model is IP licensing and chip sales, not current earnings. When 6G rolls out and billions of devices need beam management, companies whose technology is embedded in the standard collect licensing fees on every unit. Think Qualcomm's model, but at the very beginning.
How would you assess the quality and helpfulness of the CFP? I may put a portion of my portfolio into the IP just to have someone provide some useful perspective.
Because it looks like more of an IP licensing agreement than an agreement to make chips through Intel’s Foundry business. Elon is trying to stand up his own foundry and own the entire supply chain, not use Intel’s business and just relabel it as Terafab. The announcement is very vague but it reads like a licensing agreement for some Intel IP that Elon would hypothetically use at his own factories (not Intel’s).
The important question is whether Intel can get their 18a process down and then keep pushing smaller. TSMC has no spare capacity, and no one likes the idea that the only source of the most advanced chips is an island right next to China. If Intel can finally get their fab act together it would justify a big increase in stock value. They might have to split the company so the fab side is independent to ensure other customers feel comfortable giving them access to their IP- but they’ve honestly needed to do that for a while anyway.
Probably both, but IP claims is a nice cover story for speech suppression
Okay fair point on Microsoft announcement from 2024. If Intel can get 18A yields then Microsoft will produce their shitty Maia accelerator on it. However, Maia has been significantly delayed so we'll see. I think Microsoft is more likely to lean on Nvidia and AMD for accelerators than their own ASIC which isn't great. I'm betting the "deal" isn't guaranteed money or production for Microsoft unless conditions are met (like yields and quality). Let's see if any production ever materializes. Terafab is a joke. And nowhere in the announcement does it say Elon will producing chips through Intel's Foundry business. It says Intel is going to help Elon set up his fab. He wants to set up and own his own complete fabs for the entire supply chain. He doesn't want to be an Intel customer. More likely is he is going to license some specific IP from Intel.
sana made pancreas cells that don't reject when put in a human and still produce insulin. --- they have some pretty cool biotech IP. They aren't the only one doing this actually, but mayo investing in them is a good sign. ripping after hours https://preview.redd.it/ua70vsczy0vg1.png?width=860&format=png&auto=webp&s=1734406e7cc514d6ff75c4ce15cb1d7d0a682c5b
Probably gonna be banned again, but I don't give a fuck. I'll just reset my IP and make a new account with a new email address. LOL eat a bag of dicks Reddit.
> I just meant Netflix had a clear cut reason why it tanked. And as soon as it backed out of acquisition stock recovered. to be fair, they probably wouldn't have been fine even if they did stick to the deal (as long as they ultimately got it and all the regulatory stuff got approved). wbd does have a decent amount of desirable IP. harry potter is one of the biggest IP's in the world, plus all the various big name hbo stuff, and while more of a legacy thing than a current thing you've got all the looneytoons/hanna barbara stuff.
And I remind China that fishing in other nations waters and copyright infringement of our IP violates International law. See no one cares
Switch 2 is actually selling quite well. Yes the tariffs made them revisit the amount for the US market, but that is still huge. There are quite some exclusive games coming out for the switch, and Nintendo is using their IP quite well even with movie tickets and merchandising.
The rage in the markets has the wrong reason. 1.) you just cant replace the software XY by an AI, except the IP owner does this by himself. Software has massive IP behind it. This massive IP must be used to train an AI... but an AI is nothing except a LLM, and a LLM is nothing without external "skills", e.g. for data retrieval, data processing, data storage, data visialization. A LLM is NOT something you throw in any kind of unstructured infmration, it can understand language only and imanges. 2.) Software companies were overvalued. Their values correct now. I look often... how far have they been falling, how integrated are they with their clietns and eventually with tenders taken? SAP for example is such a huge thing you would need more money than the market cap of SAP to train an AI with that what SAP does in fact and the AI alone cant do what SAP does. The future: The strength of an AI is the language model, the understanding of written or painted information. E.g. automatied document processing... e.g. in a claim checking department of an insurance company. Where they get millions of application letters, claim letters, explanation letters. Formerly a human had to read all of that stuff which leaves place for misinterpretation and misjudgement. After moving this into an AI the human has only to check the decision of the AI , claim accepted, claim rejected, further material needed... AI is not a database. But you will need a databaes in case the service processes data, stores it somewhere and uses it later. The AI can "remember" written stuff.
Intel's fabs and IP are worth more than their current valuation, especially with the US government wanting more and more domestic tech, TSMC always at risk due to China, and chip supply demand growing for one reason after another. Plus their current chip design is actually pretty decent. Multithread is great, more efficient than AMD, better iGPU than AMD, and Windows on Arm being a dud. Of course they still need to regain lost server ground but for they are in a better place now IP wise than they were in the last 7 years.
Some of those may have a step up in cost basis if you inherited them though that depends on various technicalities. Yes the IP is maximally useful if you have extra free cash. It has had about even US vs international equities in its allocation which hurt for a few years but benefitted this year. It would be reasonable to keep existing funds and trim to an OK allocation and then direct dividends and interest into a different pool.
Once china is in control, it is possible they dominate ai space. Attempt to control Taiwan, expand their oil production which probably involves some invasions. And also rare mineral extraction. Yuan #1. Move your body to some RMB. China is kinda more lawless, so once they are in power, they need to show the world they are responsible leader, by creating real IP protection and such. This will be after they bully and solidify their #1 status
I definitely agree that even if Sam and Dario don’t want to explicitly collaborate, they will likely form some kind of alignment with the aim of maximizing margins. However, I do wonder whether that front will actually hold, given that: A. China exists, B. Some employee within these companies might recognize the economic and social implications and either leak IP to open-source initiatives or found a startup using similar ideas, drastically lowering costs It’s similar to how Amazon tries to protect its margins at all costs, yet that hasn’t prevented Temu and Alibaba from growing rapidly by offering similar services at significantly lower prices, despite best efforts from the West to contain them. My thesis is that yes, Cartel will definitely will be formed by the big AI players but they will be either internally or externally poked at so hard that any kind of high margin power like Saas Companies traditionally held evaporates. But either way job displacements will be a hugh talking point in upcoming elections...
Just a friendly reminder that American companies trained their models on copyrighted content so they are already thiefs stealing IP and nobody is doing anything about it. There is no IP in the first place to start with...
What I keep asking myself is: what actually stops China from catching up or stealing IP through prompt injection attacks, replicating the tech at scale, and offering something that’s 90% as good for 20% of the price? Wouldn’t that just drive margins down across the board and lead to pretty unexciting stock performance overall? There are high geopolitical incentives to destroy that buisness model at least ..
If OpenAI goes bankrupt, Microsoft already has the rights to their IP
I can't wait to see the evidence that someone from an IP address in the white house made trades on PLTR minutes before this post.
Isn't Amazon bankrolling them these days? Microsoft has OpenAI IP rights and invested early.
CPI more like IP through my Cock. amirite !
Interesting find on the patent milestone. Patents are definitely a good sign for IP protection, but with penny stocks in the AI/delivery space, I always dig deeper into the fundamentals first. A few things I'd check before getting excited: Are they actually generating revenue from these patents or still burning cash on R&D? How much runway do they have? And most importantly - are there any major players already licensing their tech or just pilot programs? The autonomous delivery infrastructure play makes sense conceptually, but execution is everything with these small caps. Worth running through due diligence to see if the financials back up the tech story before jumping in.
What the fuck did you just fucking say about me, you little bitch? I'll have you know I graduated top of my class in the Navy Seals, and I've been involved in numerous secret raids on Al-Quaeda, and I have over 300 confirmed kills. I am trained in gorilla warfare and I'm the top sniper in the entire US armed forces. You are nothing to me but just another target. I will wipe you the fuck out with precision the likes of which has never been seen before on this Earth, mark my fucking words. You think you can get away with saying that shit to me over the Internet? Think again, fucker. As we speak I am contacting my secret network of spies across the USA and your IP is being traced right now so you better prepare for the storm, maggot. The storm that wipes out the pathetic little thing you call your life. You're fucking dead, kid. I can be anywhere, anytime, and I can kill you in over seven hundred ways, and that's just with my bare hands. Not only am I extensively trained in unarmed combat, but I have access to the entire arsenal of the United States Marine Corps and I will use it to its full extent to wipe your miserable ass off the face of the continent, you little shit. If only you could have known what unholy retribution your little "clever" comment was about to bring down upon you, maybe you would have held your fucking tongue. But you couldn't, you didn't, and now you're paying the price, you goddamn idiot. I will shit fury all over you and you will drown in it. You're fucking dead, kiddo.
Their IP ain’t worth $3B. Aston Martin also makes an incredibly cool motor and a great car and just actually sells it for what it costs to make and their market cap is less than half a billion. Lucid is valued as if it’s a viable business when it’s not.
IP thinks AI will get rid of Servers because people will vibe code their own servers at home
Sure - and I'll reiterate again, I'm no authority on either realm; the finance element of MSFT specifically; nor would do I claim to be a higher up EA. I'm not even a C suiter who makes decisions; at most? My opinion gets sought.... I'm just saying. I think there *are* better options than GPT. However, as MSFT has always done? They're ahead of everyone else on end-to-end integration and presenting a "something" for corporate purchase. I mean, I can - and have - argued until the cows come home that I'd rather use Claude... but from an enterprise perspective? Costs, ease of integration, security, IP protection? I completely get why GPT/copilot/MSFT wins. I don't even make the decisions, but it would probably be mine on an enterprise level, too. Microsoft isn't great at anything, but they're just generally best at being MVP - and they price to sell - across the board.
Sounds fair.... FWIW, my 2 cents both as an investor but also as an IT pro for 25 years now? My view on MSFT is that like IBM a generation or two ago? It ain't gonna crash and burn. *Maybe* \- and I don't think it will - it slides into a "solid value" play. Why? First, the revenue splits on "software" - at least, consumer-driven - has already collapsed. Something like 4% now. They *do* still own commercial suites - maybe that changes, too - but I say this working for a large multinational? I'd be shocked - despite being knee-deep in AI and embracing brave new worlds - if that market share collapses. Sheeeyyyyiiittttt.... My company is hardly a trog - but we don't even allow use of Zoom or etc. It's all gotta be Teams. I don't see them losing that corporate market - which is far bigger, revenue-wise - any time soon. That's without even talking basic OS. Second, they're aggressively going after cloud share -- I live in a hell that has me dealing with both AWS and Azure, in different spaces. I have lots of haterade for both, in different ways.... but in general? Azure is improving; AWS is pissing me off more and more. Third, the AI investment/integration? Personally, I like Anthropic/Claude.... but GPT (and GPT-powered Copilot) is pretty nifty. Firms are - quite properly and correctly - worried about security and IP. MSFT/GPT is leading the way on that -- IP protection, security, etc. Pair that with their commercial/corporate penetration? Well-situated in the near term. Whatever on the charts and the emerging technology.... As an investor and a longer term buy-and-hold guy? I'm not expecting multiples, but I think MSFT remains a solid backbone.
I think MSFT is actually in for an era of decline as ironic as that sounds. \- They're outpaced by AAPL and GOOGL for consumer friendly hardware \- Office business is a legacy monopoly that will ultimately lose to freeware sooner than later like Google Classroom \- They were the first to the AI race but it's looking increasingly like the beginning of AI was more of a financial and tech throttle period. Now that the transition period of a new field has been passed things will develop exponentially faster. Massive opportunities will present themselves with ML/AI in the future but it's difficult to see how MSFT can guard their share of the pie when the tech becomes more mainstream \- Gaming division is stacked with IPs for decades. They can play it pretty safe and extract maximum value long term from players so long as they play it safe. IP isn't indestructible but it can be milked sustainably if you don't push the fans too much. \- Azure is the real gem. It's essentially the only real cloud ecosystem rival to AWS because other cloud providers (like Google Cloud) are essentially just re-packaged AWS. This can still bite them in the ass because if these rival cloud providers are still getting the job done and Azure growth continues to slow they'll lose their dominance as well.
Simply looking at their market cap right now, I think their IPs are worth much much more. Assassin's creed, Far Cry and Siege are huge names in gaming. That being said, I have little faith in the leadership. As do most investors it seems. So you are buying into a company, which has great IP rights, but seems to not properly be able to use them. I do have a small part of my portfolio in Ubi, I hope to see a little bit of a come back, espescially with the new additions to leadership on Assassin's Creed and the first actions they have taken. But from all the stocks in my portfolio, this is by far the most risky one I have. That being said, the fact that they were big in the past, does in no way mean they cannot just go bankrupt and disappear. You seem to not have a thorough understanding of stocks, so if you invest anything just do it in some general well known fund.
Meth heads is an american thing - not Chinese. Regarding why? Billions of dollars of peptides are being sold on gray/black market because many are not FDA approved. They are not FDA approved because they are aminos your body produces thus pharma companies cannot own the intellectual property / licensing. On the GLP1s that are FDA approved (IP is being challenged in court) but the pharma companies are so greedy that people are forced to buy direct. China sells a year supply for 300 - a clinical sells it for 12k-20k. If you're overweight insurance still will deny claims. Awful USA healthcare is why China has a market.
Of course, this isn't a safe play. It has its risks, just like any other stock, specially biotech ones. But the goal isn't to find a risk free stock, but to find one where the market has mispriced the risk. At a $9M market cap with \~$13M in cash, the market is literally valuing their Phase 3 ready pipeline at negative $4M. That's an irrational overreaction to the AKI news. The AKI trial stop was a design issue, not a toxicity issue. Meanwhile, the Phase 2b win in Pancreatitis was published in The Lancet, that level of peer reviewed validation for a $0.60 stock is extremely rare. Big funds like Deerfield and Renaissance haven't dumped their positions. They are playing the long game on the CRAC channel IP. It's definitely a high stakes trade, but at these levels, the downside is a known quantity while the upside is a 10x correction to analyst targets. I see it as a total asymmetric bet.
Oh yes China, that stalwart of respecting IP protection....
If SNDK disappeared tomorrow what would be the consequences? Im a lil lost on what their moat is. Ya HBF is a possible moat but we will need to see Nvidia level margins and IP for it to matter.
They sold their cellphone business to Microsoft, but still have a separate business. I think they own/manage some IP and make infrastructure hardware. The current Nokia phones are made by another company, which I think is licensing the name. Not sure how that part works.
The fact everyone is falling for this shows that IP isn't the only fucking idiot.
Companies have physical assets , land, building, IP , they also have hopefully positive cash flows Imagine somehow you could buy 100% of MSFT shares for $1 but you could never sell or transfer or give away ownership . Would you? Well sure, you could hire yourself and give yourself a $10 million dollar a year salary , or collect billions of dividends Now I wouldn't be a good CEO so I would beg current leadership to stay on and try to setup some profit sharing plan but MSFT pays out billions in dividends and does like 50 billion in stock buy backs Since I would be the only share holder I get all of this, I probably would settle for 1 billion or less then try to give the rest back as bonus's to employees so I could do nothing and just collect billions in profits while they run the company since I would have no clue how to run a giant software company
> I don’t think there’s anywhere else to go for this company but down anyone buying it is basically going all in on a buyout (similar to what happened with WBD). they have desirable IP's so it's not completely off the table as a possibility, but it's equally possible (if not more probable) that they enter bankruptcy, the shareholders get nothing, and the IP gets sold in bankruptcy like what happened with thq/midway/acclaim.
I wouldn't want to touch Ubisoft under any condition. There were rumors about them trying to sell their main IP's to a new company (something pretty shady, don't remember exactly). Tencent is not in it's best moment. Ubisoft has take every decision aimed to reduce their quality. (Copy pasting, AI, NFT's...) They had really big IP's and they fucked up. (Avatar, Star Wars...) They are kinda family owned and the company had legal issues similar to ABK (sexual abuse and worse) They are 10k employees, and probably the best ones already left. They lost all their reputation. There are another posts related to buying Ubisoft in this subreddit and the opinion seem to be not to buy. You should check them for more info.
Ubisoft is not innovative at all. Its games are a copy pasta reskin each year with micro transactions that no one wants thrown in. Its IP is very dated and long past desirability, confirmed by no buyout from Microsoft or Sony which is directly tapping up studios. I don’t now the future price but growth is not where it needs to be for this company. I would seriously think again if your opinion is based on innovation and growth
Was that ruling for broad tariffs- 25% for countries x,y, z? If he’s putting tariffs on specific goods, I think that is what the legal scholars had argued the tariff system was set up for. If he really wants to get more US manufacturing, policy changes as to what is considered made in the USA should be reviewed. This is especially true of selling US companies and IP to foreign entities. Causing US manufacturing to be at a 25% disadvantage on the international market overnight is shocking. I’m no economist but easing in to cost increases of this magnitude seems like a better plan to allow companies to adjust to the changes throughout the value chain.
How are you defining value to shareholders? Dividends? If a company becomes worth more because their assets have increased as well as the value of IP, then they've still created value for the shareholders regardless of dividends.
Semiconductor manufacturer in California that makes custom chips means their product is expensive, their production is small-batch, and their business model doesn't scale. NVIDIA is probably after some IP.
Its a generic drug company so I imagine its just the assets and IP.
the purchase price for disney studio and IP would be out of the world and not make sense for Netflix. Bad buy!
Movements are not pretty this morning. Calls on IP.
Not the model weights which are the most important part of their IP
man, i gotta say, those numbers are wild! +1,362% revenue growth is insane, especially for a small cap. sounds like they’re really nailing that transition to an IP model. if they keep executing, it could definitely catch more eyes. the target range you're talking about feels pretty optimistic, but with those gross margins improving and first positive income, it seems like they might just be getting started. i mean, who doesn’t love a good transformation story? i’m curious, what do you think would be the main catalyst for them to hit those high targets?
I bought shares through Seedinvest in MMO developer. (I know that was NOT a great move.) The money was ostensibly for marketing and tightening up code, leading into the release. The release happened, without the promised marketing and the game was seriously unoptimized. The primary owner of the company, sold off the IP to an employee of the company, for around a $1, left the company with no assets and just walked away. I personally wasn't expecting to become wealthy off the investment, it was a small amount of money, in the bigger picture. I expected the value to go down, maybe never return to my original investment. I would have been happy if, at a future point, I could have made a handful of dollars or even broke even on selling my stake. I never expected, stripping the company bare, selling off all assets for a handshake and a "McDonald's Medium Soda" of value, and then walking away, leaving a shell behind that was dissolved because the POS founder couldn't even bother to file yearly reporting.
Yeah, this. There's undoubtedly going to be some fizzles, as some of the big players in AI fail to turn their investment into product, but the sector is about as likely to die as 'internet search'. Sure, Altavista didn't make it, but ... And I'm certain there's going to be a bunch of companies doing really stupid things because they didn't really understand the pitfalls of AI too. But there's also a lot of 'second wave' AI development that isn't in the mass media yet, as companies start to do more focussed R&D driven off the back of the rapid improvement in GPUs, Interconnects, and understanding of machine learning, training and model design. That doesn't IMO mean every AI company is 'safe' - I'm sure there will be a bunch of 'fail-to-monetize' collapses. I mean, a lot of 'AI usage' right now is functionally freeloading - generative AI is a great example of something that _might_ fizzle, because the product is mediocre, but the 'cost' of the input/resources is non-trivial - even if you do 'gloss over' the fact that it was probably driven by significant IP theft, what do you do when the IP you 'steal' dries up because you've made it completely no viable as an industry? I mean, maybe that won't happen - I'm pretty sure there'll be larger companies like say, Disney, who realise they can train on their own stuff, and use it as an 'assist' for their own teams to vastly improve productivity, but ...
I bought the stock because they own the IP to Lower Decks, so I think that makes them an interesting play since I like that show
totally feel you on this, DVLT's growth is wild. going from $2.6M to $39.1M is a huge jump, and the profitability signals are def a game changer. most microcaps just bleed cash forever, so seeing them actually turn a profit is refreshing. the NYIAX deal is super interesting, too. having access to that kind of IP can be a massive advantage in the tokenization space. like you said, they aren't just throwing spaghetti at the wall. the valuation at ~$100M looks enticing given their growth trajectory, but gotta keep an eye on the market sentiment and how they execute. def gonna watch this one closely! what’s your outlook on their next steps?
VPN does not make IP meaningless when most of the people using a vpn are utilizing vpn companies that are just taking your data & money to hide you from the other companies (if that), some don’t even do that and just lie to you.
If they were to find better treatments they would just sell them to corporations and those corporations would make it very expensive. Our tax dollars pay for a lot of the research that goes into new treatments. The research then gets bought and it becomes IP and trade secrets. Universities don't have the infrastructure, capital, etc., required to take it from the lab to patients.
They're too integrated into the enterprise/corporate world. I just don't buy the idea that a large company would be using Figma or Canva. Firefly IP protection was a big reason for me to buy in. But yea I am feeling the pain on it so. Wish I waited till now to buy honestly. I knew this one had a long road to recovery anyways but for a little ahead of myself I guess
I don't think they're analogous at all. Verizon is just wireless. No media. No content. No hardware. No IP. Just pipes and crap customer service. I think Verizon has more future proofing because their infrastructure is more modern. It still sucks, but at least it's not copper under ground. Verizon doesn't have the Last Mike problem that will always plague CC.
Because they're a dying business with an outmoded model and a ton of expensive infrastructure that is difficult to upgrade. They've turned their backs on their technology edge (they spent a decade build white labeled IP products and the went "Nah") in favor of keeping their battalions of operations exec & middle management fat-n-happy because they don't understand the tech. They're RF, FFS, wireless is eventually going to eat them alive and they refuse to learn how to do customer service. Peacock is awful, their content continues to age poorly and they aggressively fail to leverage it up. The brightest spot they've got is Universal Parks, and that is inextricably tied to one of the most toxic brands out there (HP and the Terfs). They're TEN PERCENT of the internet and they STILL treat their customers like garbage.
Tersana was a brand owned by Amyris. Not saying that they didn't get around the patents that ACB licensed from the university of Saskatchewan and the National research Council of Canada, but you can look at their IP portfolio to figure out what they were doing. Also, ACB didn't own the entire pathway, just certain ways to get between the stops. Lastly, how is this a major hit? Is anyone still trying to use biosynthesis to make cannabinoids? That should tell you about the commercial relevance.
Tersana was a brand owned by Amyris. Not saying that they didn't get around the patents that ACB licensed from the university of Saskatchewan and the National research Council of Canada, but you can look at their IP portfolio to figure out what they were doing. Also, ACB didn't own the entire pathway, just certain ways to get between the stops. Lastly, how is this a major hit? Is anyone still trying to use biosynthesis to make cannabinoids? That should tell you about the commercial relevance.
Buying Anebulo Pharmaceuticals ANEB. I think they delisted to see. I used Ai for my analysis. Let me know you thoughts. The valuation case: Independent professional fairness opinion from Houlihan Capital valued the company at $3.50 per share in July 2025. Current price $0.88 to $1.00 represents an 71 to 75% discount to that independent professional valuation. You’re buying a dollar for 25 to 29 cents. The insider conviction: Aron English and 22NW deployed over $23 million across five separate purchases with zero sells ever. His most recent deployment was $10 million at $0.99 in December 2024 — after the oral program pivot, after the going-private announcement, after bankers said institutional interest was zero. He bought anyway. Professional fund manager with fiduciary obligations doesn’t do that without specific reason to believe value will be realized. The conditional pharma thesis: The coordinated December 2024 package — commercial consultant confirmation, FDA pre-IND meeting, $10 million capital deployment, all simultaneously — strongly suggests specific conditional pharma interest requiring Phase 1 IV safety data as the triggering condition. You don’t assemble that package without a specific reason. The going-private timing: Delisted February 2026 immediately after JPMorgan Healthcare Conference January 2026. Cunningham almost certainly had confidential pharma conversations at JPMorgan. Form 15 filed within weeks creating complete information darkness protecting those conversations from disclosure. The timing is surgical not coincidental. No banker hired: Companies run formal M&A processes with investment bankers when they don’t know who their buyer is. Anebulo never hired an M&A banker. That suggests they already know who their buyer is and don’t need a competitive process. The science is real: Completed Phase 1 and Phase 2 oral with positive efficacy data permanently banked. Clean safety profile across 250 subjects. First-in-class CB1 antagonist mechanism with zero competition. Active Phase 1 IV study enrolling right now with August 2026 completion. FDA actively collaborating on development — unusual and valuable signal. Federal validation: NIDA awarded Year 1 and Year 2 grants totaling approximately $1.9 million. Federal agencies don’t fund research they don’t believe in. Independent scientific validation from the National Institutes of Health. FDA collaboration: FDA specifically proposed close ongoing collaboration to advance the pediatric program. That language — close ongoing collaboration — is unusual. FDA doesn’t say that casually. It signals genuine institutional interest in seeing this drug developed. The PRV pathway: Priority Review Voucher worth $150 million upon FDA approval of a pediatric indication before September 2029. A pharma acquirer who can execute Phase 2 IV and get approval before 2029 captures $150 million that partially or fully offsets their acquisition cost. The PRV makes the economics of buying Anebulo dramatically more attractive for the right acquirer. The commercial consultant validation: A top five pharmaceutical consulting firm — the same firms that advise major pharma companies on commercial decisions — evaluated the pediatric ACI indication and confirmed it as commercially viable. This isn’t Cunningham’s opinion. It’s independent professional validation that pharma BD teams can reference in their own internal approval processes. The board composition: Every board member has specific relevant experience. Cunningham — pharma deals at Icagen with Roche and Sanofi. Shah — Goldman, JPMorgan, Warburg, Sumitomo, Genentech. Lin — sold Ab Initio to Ligand himself. Aryeh — on Ligand board. Kupchyk — former FDA Associate Chief Counsel for Drugs. English — 22NW conviction buyer. Lawler — founder with skin in the game. This is not a passive board. It’s assembled specifically to execute a transaction. Nantahala held through everything: An independent institutional investor with 8.53% ownership held through the going-private drama, the tender offer disappointment, the delisting, and the Form 15. They filed a 13G at the moment of delisting confirming their continued ownership. Sophisticated institutional investors don’t hold through that level of corporate chaos without conviction in the underlying value. The oral program floor value: Even if the IV pediatric program never generates a transaction the oral Phase 2 data package, manufacturing process, patent estate, and FDA relationship support a floor acquisition value of $20 to $40 million — $0.50 to $1.00 per share. You’re buying the floor value with the IV pediatric program and PRV as free options. The patent estate: Three issued US patents plus six applications plus PCT filings covering methods of use, composition of matter, and delivery systems. Meaningful IP protection that transfers full value to any acquirer. Cash runway confirmed: $9 million cash plus $3 million loan facility as of December 31 2025. Management guidance says funded through at least February 2027. Phase 1 IV completes August 2026. Cash runway covers the critical data readout with months of buffer. The PRV deadline creates urgency: September 2029 sunset means a pharma acquirer must act relatively soon to capture the PRV value before the window closes. Every month of delay reduces the time available to complete Phase 2 IV and get FDA approval. The deadline creates negotiating urgency that works in English’s favor. The cannabis market is growing: Legal cannabis expanding globally. Higher potency products increasing ACI severity. More pediatric exposures as legalization spreads. The commercial opportunity English and the commercial consultant evaluated in 2024 is larger in 2026 and will be larger still in 2028 when a Phase 3 oral or Phase 2 IV could complete. The sophisticated buyer activity this week: 48,506 shares traded Friday alone. Consistent $1.00 price support all week. Algorithmic accumulation suggesting institutional or sophisticated capital. A fund potentially trying to accumulate below $1.00 with specific price discipline. Smart money finding the same thesis independently and deploying real capital. The information asymmetry: Post Form 15 Anebulo has zero disclosure obligations. Any pharma conversation, any LOI, any term sheet, any data room activity is completely invisible. A deal announcement could come with zero warning at any time. The upside is binary and sudden. You either miss it or you don’t. The risk reward at current prices: Cost $0.88 to $1.00. Houlihan fair value $3.50. Potential deal value $3.50 to $5.00. Downside in distressed wind down $0.20 to $0.25. Risk reward approximately 3 to 1 to 5 to 1 at current prices. The complete bull case in one sentence: A first-in-class clinical stage pharmaceutical asset with validated Phase 2 efficacy data, active Phase 1 IV trial, FDA collaboration, NIDA validation, PRV optionality, $3.50 independent professional valuation, 51% controlling insider with $23 million deployed and zero sells, conditional pharma interest suggested by coordinated corporate actions, and complete information darkness protecting confidential deal negotiations — all trading at $0.88 to $1.00 per share with a sophisticated fund potentially accumulating below $1.00 right now
If they ever wondered about you, all they need to do is search your social security number. They’ll see every transaction, every IP address. Hell, they’ll see your Starbucks order Don’t deny the fact that this is all being gathered into multiple data centers
Got news for you bro, they know your IP and browser and hardware. Any site you access can immediately identify you.
reddit is not even remotely anonymous. They know exactly who you are unless you are using tons of security measures that 99% of people arent-- like not being logged into google on the same browser you're using reddit on, not ever connecting to reddit via your home IP address, not to mention the data collection/fingerprinting analytics they do to your accounts.
Musk has already publicly said the future value of the company is in robotics. He knows TSLA is just another player in the EV market as I predicted would be the case several years ago. There is no IP that protects an "EV", anybody can build one, it's a commodity product. Funny thing is robotics will be a very large market, but general humannoid robot will also be a commodity product. I think it was fair to say TSLA wa first to mass market an EV. They are definitely not first with humannoid robot.
IRGC I found one of those American soldiers working remotely from his hotel room, Shahed-136 on his IP address please
Reasonably coppied and foreign goods which compete with local are illegally strangled with tarrifs and pushed to form JV so all IP , know how could be easy accessable?
Get an IP box and close this shit
Yeah but my IP-TV has most movies and series too, so why bother? I pay for Netflix because $11 is nothing to me.
As long as it is more convenient than pirating, I will pay the price. I have IP-TV for my soccer needs, but pay for Netflix because sometimes I can’t be bothered to search.
Unless viewership tanks theres no way, that IP is too massive.
So ARM is going from IP landlord to chip landlord and tenant at the same time. Gonna be fun explaining margins now