12 comments

  • forshaper 1 hour ago
    I don't get it. Most companies registered in the state I live in, for example, are not actually located here. They simply receive mail through their registered agent there. Why would this be news?
    • raddan 52 minutes ago
      On the other hand, most of the companies registered in Delaware are not trying to dodge US federal regulations. Polymarket is prohibited from operating in the US market. Nevertheless they have a substantial customer base in the US, and the part left unsaid in the NPR story, is that they’re probably also headquartered in the US. Almost definitely a violation of either gambling or securities regulations.
      • mywacaday 3 minutes ago
        I used to work for a large financial services company who bought 4 storey office block and fitted it out with very small but with own door individual offices that had internet and a connected desk phone so that companies could rent them and say they had more than a box office address in that European capital, I never found out what the rent was.
      • trollbridge 27 minutes ago
        They are often trying to dodge their local state’s regulations, though.
        • _--__--__ 6 minutes ago
          Incorporating in Delaware was initially attractive because of usury laws that matter to a small number of business sectors.

          The charitable take is that most corporations want to comply with a state's regulations because unintentional compliance violations are painful and expensive, and it is relatively easy to be confident that you are compliant as a Delaware corp.

      • pear01 15 minutes ago
        Polymarket is already working on a full return to the US market aided by sympathetic policy changes of the current administration.

        Additionally, the claim "most of the companies registered in Delaware are not trying to dodge US federal regulations" strikes me as dubious. Every company seeks to lower its regulatory burden. If they're not finding loopholes, then often they're the ones writing the regulations and funding congressional campaigns. I'm not sure the claim Polymarket is unique re its relationship to the government in this respect is credible. They seem to be working quite intimately with the current administration on returning from their Biden era "ban".

    • Extropy_ 1 hour ago
      They acknowledge this in the article as well, surprisingly enough.

      > Corporate law experts say while there is nothing illegal about housing a business inside a shell company, the practice is often a strategic move to protect a firm's wealth or shield it against lawsuits and action from government regulators.

      What is the thought process of someone writing this? Does this article have any meaningful or critical thought behind it?

      • janalsncm 58 minutes ago
        It isn’t newsworthy for people who believe the laws around corporate transparency and accountability are good enough.

        Many people do not, which is why it is noteworthy, even if it is standard.

      • horacemorace 40 minutes ago
        They’re avoiding editorializing. PBS news has the same dry “facts only” flavor. Legitimate reporting takes the high road; corpo-media too often take the low road. Unfortunately human information consumers tend to gravitate toward sources of maximum opinion.
      • Exoristos 15 minutes ago
        They're doing their part in keeping a spotlight on Polymarket. The content of the article is not irrelevant, but it is less important than the existence of the article.
      • forshaper 1 hour ago
        I guess we're scratching our heads, and even we clicked.
    • creatonez 58 minutes ago
      It is indeed already normal for rich people to do things that are sketchy as hell.

      Maybe let's make it not normal?

      • tt24 18 minutes ago
        Registered agents are sketchy now?
        • creatonez 11 minutes ago
          If they are in a completely different jurisdiction with no connection whatsoever to any of the humans involved in operating the organization... yes. It's an outrageous way to escape the force of the law that has been rubber stamped by corrupt politicians.
      • JuniperMesos 45 minutes ago
        I really don't trust your definition of sketchy as hell and don't want it to have legal or normative force.
        • creatonez 23 minutes ago
          For-profit companies jurisdiction shopping without any physical presence is so clearly sketchy that it's wild anyone could see it otherwise. I can't imagine a normal person not being shocked in disbelief when they first learn about the concept of tax havens.
        • otterley 18 minutes ago
          You haven't heard their definition yet.
    • Carioca 1 hour ago
      > Why would this be news?

      Mostly because international litigation is, let's say, fraught issues (as in "good luck!")

    • aaron695 53 minutes ago
      [dead]
    • JuniperMesos 46 minutes ago
      Because NPR dislikes polymarket and thinks that reporting this will discredit them.
      • shermantanktop 4 minutes ago
        If the facts themselves discredit Polymarket, NPR doesn't have to like or dislike them. Polymarket made itself newsworthy, it can't complain if someone looks at them closely.
      • NuclearPM 27 minutes ago
        It does.
  • dweez 58 minutes ago
    If you follow Apple's official address to a lawyer's office in Delaware, don't be surprised that Tim Cook isn't there to greet you.
    • kibwen 36 minutes ago
      Apple is registered in California, as both their website ( https://investor.apple.com/faq/default.aspx ) and their most recent form 8-K ( https://d18rn0p25nwr6d.cloudfront.net/CIK-0000320193/beb2c24... ) confirm.
    • trollbridge 23 minutes ago
      Indeed, their registered agent address is 1209 North Orange Street in Wilmington.
      • quietsegfault 3 minutes ago
        So what? A registered agent is literally the agent registered to accept process service. The registered agent is clearly not the corporate headquarters, a branch office, or anything other than a business whose purpose is to accept lawsuits, subpoenas, and other legal and official notices.
    • EA-3167 46 minutes ago
      For what it's worth the only "official address" I could find was Apple Park in Cupertino.
    • ares623 23 minutes ago
      It's an interesting "problem". The cities we have now exist because businesses and people want to be located in the same geographical area to maximize, well, doing business.

      Now the opposite is happening. Businesses have no incentive being located in the same physical area they do business in. In fact, they have opposite incentives. The closer they are to their customers and workers, the less they can do things with impunity.

  • NooneAtAll3 1 hour ago
    to be fair, empty non-existing official office is nothing new. iirc, Delaware has a warehouse that's official residence of hundreds of corporations (for tax reasons)

    I don't understand the rest of the article, tho... It complains that company that (officially) left the US market and already blocks US ips from participating... isn't doing enough? Officially there's no ground to demand more

    If you really want to solve the problem - start hunting down unofficial means. Investigate influencers that started mentioning Polymarket out of the blue. Look into news outlets that decided to start mentioning polymarket as supposed proxy of popular opinion. Start advertizing campaigns against gambling addiction the same way as against smoking

  • ThomW 1 hour ago
    Why are Americans allowed to invest in a business that would be illegal if based in the US? Why can they be patrons? Idgi
  • otterley 13 minutes ago
    I'm shocked--shocked--that a company with the integrity and upright moral character of Polymarket would have their registered agent located in Panama.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panama_Papers#Illegal_activiti...

    https://www.theguardian.com/news/2016/apr/03/the-panama-pape...

    (Wow. It's only been 10 years since the leak occurred? How time flies.)

  • xiphias2 51 minutes ago
    There's an easy way for polymarket to have a nice office in a nice city in USA: legalize it there and have nice enough regulations and incentives for it to move there.

    It would help a lot actually for protecting people's money instead of driving it offshore.

    But it doesn't look like making USA compete in this $15B market is NPR's goal with this article.

    • soraminazuki 2 minutes ago
      While you're at it, let's legalize pig butchering scams too.

      "It would help a lot actually for protecting people's money instead of driving it offshore. But it doesn't look like making USA compete in this $75B market is NPR's goal with this article."

    • BowBun 49 minutes ago
      Good on NPR. These markets are a cancer on society and should be outlawed further.
      • alchemist1e9 5 minutes ago
        Does anyone have a good source that details these negative effects? I’m not doubting they exist, I mean gambling in general has many negative externalities, but I’m just interested in identifying the cancer aspects more specifically.
        • shermantanktop 1 minute ago
          Would you go to a cancer doctor if you knew they were betting on Polymarket as to whether you would do well in your cancer treatment?

          Polymarket appears to have people who have both the ability to shape outcomes and anonymously profit on those outcomes.

      • sophrosyne42 6 minutes ago
        I have yet to see an argument against them that isn't more than personal disgust
    • guizadillas 47 minutes ago
      why would they do that if the whole business depends on not having regulations?
      • sophrosyne42 7 minutes ago
        Which regulations in particular? All businesses rely on governments not choking them into nonexistence by having regulations that harm that business. Regulations are not an amorphus blob. There are other regulations that would also benefit a business to enable its existence, but we would not say (or should not say) that "the whole business relies on having regulations," because that is being intentionally vague about what the regulations in question actually are. The way you phrase it almost implied there is inherently something dangerous or suspect about something that is universal about how regulations can effect businesses.
  • ChrisMarshallNY 1 hour ago
    So Polymarket is a Web3 outfit?
    • londons_explore 49 minutes ago
      It might as well be a regular website. The crypto bit adds nothing since 99.9% of users just use the webUI.
    • jcgrillo 1 hour ago
      "Court filings show the law office also did work for FTX"

      If the shoe fits..

  • tick_tock_tick 28 minutes ago
    What happened to the quality of NPR over the last dozen or so years it's just gotten worse and worse.
    • lokar 27 minutes ago
      Can you explain what you did not like in the story?
    • dyauspitr 23 minutes ago
      It’s gotten better and more in depth and grounded in my opinion.
  • hx8 1 hour ago
    I'm sure this is true for thousands and thousands of companies.
    • EA-3167 44 minutes ago
      Maybe that should be discouraged? Even if you don't think so, most companies aren't de facto attempts to skirt gambling regulations while also incentivizing corruption and fraud in everyday life.
  • skywhopper 1 hour ago
    Polymarket engages in scammy behavior?? Wait, isn’t that their entire business model?
    • EdwardDiego 1 hour ago
      The part where all their legal troubles went away when one of the President's sons became an "advisor" says "yes".
      • raddan 50 minutes ago
        I don’t know why you were modded down because this is mostly true. They are still prohibited from operating in the US but it appears that regulators have no appetite to enforce the law.
  • gordian-mind 52 minutes ago
    "the wildly popular prediction market site that has flourished in President Trump's second term."

    The only purpose I could see for this intro is to prime the reader negatively before any argument.

  • NDlurker 47 minutes ago
    Water is wet