Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink
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@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@dafyre said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@Jason said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@Minion-Queen said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@Minion-Queen said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
Yeah it is enough reason for me to not buy anything as well. However we went to Brother for printer a few years ago.
Remember there is a difference between HP and HPE though as @scottalanmiller has reminded us.
All Printers even LaserJet Pro is considered HP, not HPE though.
Yes, all of the issues are with HP. But He had been saying that he was going to question using HPE because of something that HP did.
@scottalanmiller : Do both companies have many of the same people on the board of directors?
Is that significant? Lots of companies share boards.
When HPE, which happens to have a large portion of its board also on HP's board, yes, I'd suggest that is significant, especially in light of the stunts being pulled by HP.
That their boards are diverging to me is a good sign.
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@dafyre said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@dafyre said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@Jason said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@Minion-Queen said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@Minion-Queen said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
Yeah it is enough reason for me to not buy anything as well. However we went to Brother for printer a few years ago.
Remember there is a difference between HP and HPE though as @scottalanmiller has reminded us.
All Printers even LaserJet Pro is considered HP, not HPE though.
Yes, all of the issues are with HP. But He had been saying that he was going to question using HPE because of something that HP did.
@scottalanmiller : Do both companies have many of the same people on the board of directors?
Is that significant? Lots of companies share boards.
When HPE, which happens to have a large portion of its board also on HP's board, yes, I'd suggest that is significant, especially in light of the stunts being pulled by HP.
That their boards are diverging to me is a good sign.
But what's the significance? Two separate companies, two different approaches and policies. That there is overlapping members doesn't mean that they act the same in both cases. The companies are different, represent different investors and, most importantly, are driven by different management. The board does NOT manage the company (it cannot by law.) That's just an arbitrary reason to associate the two when they are different companies.
You made a few statements that I didn't follow...
- You said "When HPE, yes." What does that mean? Why is HPE itself the reason why HPE doesn't get to be its own company?
- You said "Especially in the light of the stunts being pulled by HP." What about this specific action ties HP to HPE in a way that it is not normally tied together? Other bad actions would not relate the two but this one would? Why?
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@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@dafyre said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@dafyre said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@Jason said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@Minion-Queen said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@Minion-Queen said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
Yeah it is enough reason for me to not buy anything as well. However we went to Brother for printer a few years ago.
Remember there is a difference between HP and HPE though as @scottalanmiller has reminded us.
All Printers even LaserJet Pro is considered HP, not HPE though.
Yes, all of the issues are with HP. But He had been saying that he was going to question using HPE because of something that HP did.
@scottalanmiller : Do both companies have many of the same people on the board of directors?
Is that significant? Lots of companies share boards.
When HPE, which happens to have a large portion of its board also on HP's board, yes, I'd suggest that is significant, especially in light of the stunts being pulled by HP.
That their boards are diverging to me is a good sign.
But what's the significance? Two separate companies, two different approaches and policies. That there is overlapping members doesn't mean that they act the same in both cases. The companies are different, represent different investors and, most importantly, are driven by different management. The board does NOT manage the company (it cannot by law.) That's just an arbitrary reason to associate the two when they are different companies.
You have cleared up at least one misconception I had. I did not expect the board of directors to not actually be the top of the food chain at either company. This fact pretty much shuts down my argument, which goes deeper into the anals of each company.
You made a few statements that I didn't follow...
- You said "When HPE, yes." What does that mean? Why is HPE itself the reason why HPE doesn't get to be its own company?
This is one of the misconceptions I had. But I see the same (or largely the same) board of directors, I assume similar motives and similar actions given similar scenarios, regardless of who the investors are.
- You said "Especially in the light of the stunts being pulled by HP." What about this specific action ties HP to HPE in a way that it is not normally tied together? Other bad actions would not relate the two but this one would? Why?
It does't tie them together in a way that they are not normally tied together. Not in my mind, and not while they still share the same board of directors. Even understanding now, that the boards don't do any management of either business.
Excluding the board, how much of the top brass is shared across HP and HPE? If they're 99% different, then my concerns are not valid. If they're 99% the same, then my issue remains.
What is the function of the board if not to hold sway over the direction of the company, or to provide guidance to the company's leadership?
[If any of these questions warrants a fork, feel free]
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@dafyre said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@dafyre said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@dafyre said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@Jason said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@Minion-Queen said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@Minion-Queen said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
Yeah it is enough reason for me to not buy anything as well. However we went to Brother for printer a few years ago.
Remember there is a difference between HP and HPE though as @scottalanmiller has reminded us.
All Printers even LaserJet Pro is considered HP, not HPE though.
Yes, all of the issues are with HP. But He had been saying that he was going to question using HPE because of something that HP did.
@scottalanmiller : Do both companies have many of the same people on the board of directors?
Is that significant? Lots of companies share boards.
When HPE, which happens to have a large portion of its board also on HP's board, yes, I'd suggest that is significant, especially in light of the stunts being pulled by HP.
That their boards are diverging to me is a good sign.
But what's the significance? Two separate companies, two different approaches and policies. That there is overlapping members doesn't mean that they act the same in both cases. The companies are different, represent different investors and, most importantly, are driven by different management. The board does NOT manage the company (it cannot by law.) That's just an arbitrary reason to associate the two when they are different companies.
You have cleared up at least one misconception I had. I did not expect the board of directors to not actually be the top of the food chain at either company. This fact pretty much shuts down my argument, which goes deeper into the anals of each company.
It's not that it isn't the top of the food chain, it's that it is a different role. Basically in a class C it works like this...
Investors are the top -> Board represents the investors -> CEO and Executives run the company
If you are worried about the control of the company and how it acts. that's the executives, they make the calls as to the management and running of the business. The board selects the executives on behalf of the investors, think of the board as elected representatives - but ones that can't manipulate the vote so they are truly a reflection of the share holders' desires (the shareholders can remove them anytime.) So how the investors want the board to act and what the board selects as executive traits drive the business.
So if you are concerned about the ownership - it's the investors that you have to worry about. If it is the actions of the business, it is the executives. Following the board tells you very little as they are not the owners nor are they able to take action.
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@dafyre said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
which goes deeper into the anals of each company.
Why are you all up in their ass?
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@dafyre said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
This is one of the misconceptions I had. But I see the same (or largely the same) board of directors, I assume similar motives and similar actions given similar scenarios, regardless of who the investors are.
But they act on behalf of the investors. They are just a reflection of them. The board is like proxies. The investors tell them what to do at the highest level, the board translates that into something more tangible and hires the executives and oversees them to make sure that the executives are effectively carrying out the wishes of the investors.
While a board will likely inject some amount of personality into a business, it doesn't necessarily. It is just the voice of the investors. They can be doing nothing more than representing their constituents.
Don't confuse a board with a non-representative democracy like the US government where the elected officials can do whatever they want once elected, a board is not like that. Investors can remove board members for not representing them literally overnight. The board actively reflects the investors and how a person acts on the board of one company suggests little about how they will act on the board of another. Different investors, different goals, different mandates, different job to do.
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@dafyre said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
What is the function of the board if not to hold sway over the direction of the company, or to provide guidance to the company's leadership?
To represent investors and keep a watchful eye on the executives.
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@dafyre said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
Excluding the board, how much of the top brass is shared across HP and HPE? If they're 99% different, then my concerns are not valid. If they're 99% the same, then my issue remains.
None, I would assume, that would be very, very problematic. Both companies likely have policy about how you can't do that. While it isn't technically illegal, it is essentially impossible. And do you look for this in other separate companies, like IBM and Lenovo? It would be weird to suppose that they were doing that, right? Why think it about HP and HPE but not about IBM and Lenovo? Or Apple and Foxconn? Or Microsoft and Dell? Or Amazon and FedEx?
We know that their CEOs are different people. Most top brass is not listed anywhere. But I've never heard of a single person being shared between the companies. Maybe janitors in spaces where they've not fully separated offices yet.
Think about Symantec and Veritas when they split last year. It's two unique companies, nothing is shared.
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@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@dafyre said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
What is the function of the board if not to hold sway over the direction of the company, or to provide guidance to the company's leadership?
To represent investors and keep a watchful eye on the executives.
This is like business management 101.
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@JaredBusch said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@dafyre said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
What is the function of the board if not to hold sway over the direction of the company, or to provide guidance to the company's leadership?
To represent investors and keep a watchful eye on the executives.
This is like business management 101.
Glad somebody knows how it works. I never took business management 101. I know how to run a small business. Anything over CEO and I'm clueless.
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@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
Don't confuse a board with a non-representative democracy like the US government where the elected officials can do whatever they want once elected, a board is not like that. Investors can remove board members for not representing them literally overnight. The board actively reflects the investors and how a person acts on the board of one company suggests little about how they will act on the board of another. Different investors, different goals, different mandates, different job to do.
How does that work in mega corporations with millions of shares of stock? Is that so much of the stock is held by so few that they are still able to put forth a vote in a timely manner? Otherwise you'd have to call for a vote everything the board needed to make a decision on behalf of the shareholders, but votes like that typically only happen once a year.
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@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@dafyre said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
Excluding the board, how much of the top brass is shared across HP and HPE? If they're 99% different, then my concerns are not valid. If they're 99% the same, then my issue remains.
None, I would assume, that would be very, very problematic. Both companies likely have policy about how you can't do that. While it isn't technically illegal, it is essentially impossible. And do you look for this in other separate companies, like IBM and Lenovo? It would be weird to suppose that they were doing that, right? Why think it about HP and HPE but not about IBM and Lenovo? Or Apple and Foxconn? Or Microsoft and Dell? Or Amazon and FedEx?
We know that their CEOs are different people. Most top brass is not listed anywhere. But I've never heard of a single person being shared between the companies. Maybe janitors in spaces where they've not fully separated offices yet.
Think about Symantec and Veritas when they split last year. It's two unique companies, nothing is shared.
Brant and I'm guessing millions of others think that because the didn't change their name enough to provide a clear delineation between the companies. Obviously it isn't required, but when your general public doesn't understand the different or roles of a BOD, etc, not making things significantly obvious just allows them to have assumptions that aren't true which causes the new companies tons of issues.
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@Dashrender said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
Don't confuse a board with a non-representative democracy like the US government where the elected officials can do whatever they want once elected, a board is not like that. Investors can remove board members for not representing them literally overnight. The board actively reflects the investors and how a person acts on the board of one company suggests little about how they will act on the board of another. Different investors, different goals, different mandates, different job to do.
How does that work in mega corporations with millions of shares of stock? Is that so much of the stock is held by so few that they are still able to put forth a vote in a timely manner? Otherwise you'd have to call for a vote everything the board needed to make a decision on behalf of the shareholders, but votes like that typically only happen once a year.
You are thinking of a direct democracy, not a representative one. The shareholders can vote, but it is not fast enough for business. That's the purpose of the board. Plus to be business experts as many investors are not. This way idiots can still invest safely because they hire experts to represent their interests (in theory.)
The board can act instantly... sit in a room and make decisions. If there is one shareholder or a million doesn't change anything.
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@Dashrender said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@dafyre said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
Excluding the board, how much of the top brass is shared across HP and HPE? If they're 99% different, then my concerns are not valid. If they're 99% the same, then my issue remains.
None, I would assume, that would be very, very problematic. Both companies likely have policy about how you can't do that. While it isn't technically illegal, it is essentially impossible. And do you look for this in other separate companies, like IBM and Lenovo? It would be weird to suppose that they were doing that, right? Why think it about HP and HPE but not about IBM and Lenovo? Or Apple and Foxconn? Or Microsoft and Dell? Or Amazon and FedEx?
We know that their CEOs are different people. Most top brass is not listed anywhere. But I've never heard of a single person being shared between the companies. Maybe janitors in spaces where they've not fully separated offices yet.
Think about Symantec and Veritas when they split last year. It's two unique companies, nothing is shared.
Brant and I'm guessing millions of others think that because the didn't change their name enough to provide a clear delineation between the companies. Obviously it isn't required, but when your general public doesn't understand the different or roles of a BOD, etc, not making things significantly obvious just allows them to have assumptions that aren't true which causes the new companies tons of issues.
Hence why I mentioned a few times if HPE might sue HP for defamation in this case. But as HP backed off, not likely. They have a certain shared identity that HP just dragged through the mud. Just like how Lenovo wasn't allowed to spy on people as long as IBM's badge on was on the Lenovo gear.
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@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@Dashrender said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
Don't confuse a board with a non-representative democracy like the US government where the elected officials can do whatever they want once elected, a board is not like that. Investors can remove board members for not representing them literally overnight. The board actively reflects the investors and how a person acts on the board of one company suggests little about how they will act on the board of another. Different investors, different goals, different mandates, different job to do.
How does that work in mega corporations with millions of shares of stock? Is that so much of the stock is held by so few that they are still able to put forth a vote in a timely manner? Otherwise you'd have to call for a vote everything the board needed to make a decision on behalf of the shareholders, but votes like that typically only happen once a year.
You are thinking of a direct democracy, not a representative one. The shareholders can vote, but it is not fast enough for business. That's the purpose of the board. Plus to be business experts as many investors are not. This way idiots can still invest safely because they hire experts to represent their interests (in theory.)
The board can act instantly... sit in a room and make decisions. If there is one shareholder or a million doesn't change anything.
Except for getting rid of the board members which you say (and I agree) can be there one day and gone the next - that's pretty impractical when you have millions of shares and tens of thousands of investors - but if you have a smaller pool of investors, the likeliness to out a board member because they aren't following the investors desires is much higher in a short period of time.
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@Dashrender said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@Dashrender said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
Don't confuse a board with a non-representative democracy like the US government where the elected officials can do whatever they want once elected, a board is not like that. Investors can remove board members for not representing them literally overnight. The board actively reflects the investors and how a person acts on the board of one company suggests little about how they will act on the board of another. Different investors, different goals, different mandates, different job to do.
How does that work in mega corporations with millions of shares of stock? Is that so much of the stock is held by so few that they are still able to put forth a vote in a timely manner? Otherwise you'd have to call for a vote everything the board needed to make a decision on behalf of the shareholders, but votes like that typically only happen once a year.
You are thinking of a direct democracy, not a representative one. The shareholders can vote, but it is not fast enough for business. That's the purpose of the board. Plus to be business experts as many investors are not. This way idiots can still invest safely because they hire experts to represent their interests (in theory.)
The board can act instantly... sit in a room and make decisions. If there is one shareholder or a million doesn't change anything.
Except for getting rid of the board members which you say (and I agree) can be there one day and gone the next - that's pretty impractical when you have millions of shares and tens of thousands of investors - but if you have a smaller pool of investors, the likeliness to out a board member because they aren't following the investors desires is much higher in a short period of time.
Not everyone has to vote, the investors make the rules as to how the voting happens. And almost all companies have a few very influential investors. It's a very, very rare situation where removing a board member takes any time. And there is a board process for removing members too. Lots of levels of protection and representation. It works pretty well. And investors that choose not to vote don't hold things up.
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@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
And investors that choose not to vote don't hold things up.
Right, I understand that - but just calling for a vote is not a fast process - I would guess it would take at least a week, unless some other process kicks in allowing it to be shortened, or if there are a few majority shareholders, once their votes are in, the rest don't matter.
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@Dashrender said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
And investors that choose not to vote don't hold things up.
Right, I understand that - but just calling for a vote is not a fast process - I would guess it would take at least a week, unless some other process kicks in allowing it to be shortened, or if there are a few majority shareholders, once their votes are in, the rest don't matter.
Why? If the investors want an immediate vote, they get one. It's that simple. You are hoisting assumptions onto them that don't exist. Investors alone decide the time frame.
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@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@Dashrender said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
@scottalanmiller said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
And investors that choose not to vote don't hold things up.
Right, I understand that - but just calling for a vote is not a fast process - I would guess it would take at least a week, unless some other process kicks in allowing it to be shortened, or if there are a few majority shareholders, once their votes are in, the rest don't matter.
Why? If the investors want an immediate vote, they get one. It's that simple. You are hoisting assumptions onto them that don't exist. Investors alone decide the time frame.
Investors alone - There is of course a list somewhere of all of the investors - so Scott decides he wants a vote right now - so he calls whoever demands the list, then calls everyone on that list for a vote - and what? it just happens? Town hall meeting style?
Again, getting less than 20 people quickly to make a vote is one thing, getting 1000's is another. Perhaps the number of companies that have 1000's that matter (i.e. it takes thousands of shareholders to make up a majority, it can't be done with less) is so small that it's not relevant to the conversation?
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@Dashrender said in Firmware update for HP printers bans third-party ink:
Investors alone - There is of course a list somewhere of all of the investors - so Scott decides he wants a vote right now - so he calls whoever demands the list, then calls everyone on that list for a vote - and what? it just happens? Town hall meeting style?
This is super simple. The investors decide how this works up front. It all works as the investors decide. Nothing more complex than that.