• HexesofVexes
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    286 months ago

    Honestly, why ruin something already raking in money hand over fist? Valve is profitable, sustainable, and all around well executed.

    Messing with it would cut profits!

    • @CTDummy@lemm.ee
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      6 months ago

      The same reason countless studios have destroyed successful IPs (like EA). Sure it’s profitable but it could be MORE profitable. Sales were up last year? Cool story, have sales improved over that this year though??

      • @TranscendentalEmpire@lemm.ee
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        -96 months ago

        It’s not just shareholders, I mean that’s a huge part why public corporations endlessly seek growth. But, even private corporations are beholden to capitalism’s inherent growth imperative.

        The only way to maintain solvency is to grow. Without growth you can’t save, and if you can’t save, you can’t accumulate investment capital. Which basically means your corporation is stuck in stagnation and is being eaten alive by interest rates.

        • @bigpEE@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          without growth you can’t save

          What? Why? If I’m making a million dollars profit a year, why can’t I just put it in a bank account or ETFs or whatever every year?

            • @bastion@feddit.nl
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              6 months ago

              Putting back into your company is fine. It’s the endless profiteering that sucks, and that ultimately reduces customer experience. Steam keeps it’s niche specifically by producing a great customer experience, and getting out of the way.

              Steam is also putting back into their company. But there’s no need for enshittification. That’s a publicly-traded-company, tragedy-of-the-commons thing.

          • @TranscendentalEmpire@lemm.ee
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            -46 months ago

            Wtf are you babbling about? What salary man do you know that’s “elite”? They aren’t even petite bourgeoisie, they just think they are. The middle class is dead.

              • @TranscendentalEmpire@lemm.ee
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                16 months ago

                A CEO isn’t a salary man… A salary man is just a white collar worker who works for a salary, not hourly. Which is typically taken advantage of by having them work a tremendous amount of unpaid overtime.

                Also, salaries are generally the least attractive part of being paid as a CEO. Taking the majority of your compensation as stock options allows you to avoid income tax.

                • @KeenFlame@feddit.nu
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                  15 months ago

                  Then why is their salary extremely insanely out of proportion in a destructive manner orders of magnitude over any sane number?

                  • @TranscendentalEmpire@lemm.ee
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                    15 months ago

                    Their total compensation is… But, the vast majority of their compensation packages are made up of stock options and bonuses.

                    I’m not claiming that they aren’t being paid way too much money, just that when people talk about a salary employee they don’t typically think of the CEO.

    • @KeenFlame@feddit.nu
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      566 months ago

      Why? Because the enshittification is based on short sighted greed over long sighted sustainable income.

      This is what going public means. Now it is time to grind it to dust and snort it so the elite can have their fifth christmas bonus

    • circuitfarmer
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      346 months ago

      Because MBA- and CEO-brains say that raking in money hand over fist doesn’t matter unless you can rake in consistently more and more money hand over fist. What normal people see as stable profits, they see as underperforming versus the bigger profits they see only in their head.

    • @stoly@lemmy.world
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      66 months ago

      In the end, the people who make these sorts of decisions will often bail out with their quarterly bonuses before the poo hits the fan. It’s everyone else who has to deal with the fallout.

    • @Olgratin_Magmatoe
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      56 months ago

      Because enshitifying their service would earn them short term profits, which is the only thing corps/shareholders care about.