I think a big proportion of them wouldn't 'know'. At least in my experience considering selling out the partners or buyers will try to keep a good image. But there are smells. Maybe the partner has their HQ in place that is a hotspot for intelligence/security industry or the deal is at such a price that it would only make sense if the asset as purchased for nefarious purposes.
I too get worried when I see npm. Luckily I use bun install <everything> so it's all good. In seriousness I do at least have a 7d min age on the packages.
I add multiplayer to most of my puzzle games now because couples love it. Redactle is the main one. Often Redactle is too hard to beat alone but it's great for a colab.
This 100%. I live rural and my water pump broke. No water means no showers, no dishwasher, no washing machine, and everyone in the family being uncomfortable. Realistically you get whatever the plumbing place has in stock and knows how to install - even if it's not technically the best one for the site.
But is the income data is also available to individuals? If I can find out the income of another professional in a similar role that becomes the anchoring point. Otherwise the company will just offer {prev_year_income} + peanuts.
It is. You can basically check out the company linkedin, people in similar roles/YoE, then google their name to find out their birthday, then just call our IRS. Ask for declared income for year X, X-1 etc. This gives you an anchor as parent said. It's a way to change the power imbalance when negotiating. I know friends that do this when applying for jobs. There's a law coming that makes this basically worthless, since the salary range for the role must be declared openly with the ad. And that btw is one of the first questions I ask when talking to hiring manager or HR, to find out if it's a good fit.
Does this also change the way people peacock? I wonder if people would stop creating a facade of wealth (cars, jewellery etc) if the numbers were public. Then the winning move is to invest.
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