Wednesday, July 31, 2019
ICYMI: #corpgov Midweek Roundup (July 31, 2019)
"Economists are more or less unanimous in calling rent control destructive. The only short-term winners are people who’ve already locked in.... but wait until neighboring apartments deteriorate ...." #corpgov https://t.co/VzAQ8iTzC5
— Stefan Padfield (@ProfPadfield) July 28, 2019
"decades of imperialism, censorship, and torture; the Gulag archipelago, reeducation camps designed to eradicate the victim's entire personality, and the systematic industrial slaughter of 100 million people (and still counting in North Korea, China, and Cuba)" #corpgov https://t.co/RtUZZnWrnC
— Stefan Padfield (@ProfPadfield) July 28, 2019
"the strongest ownership interests most plausibly belong to the owners of the residual control rights in the corporation – the voting shares" #corpgov https://t.co/Vtv8niSxlV
— Stefan Padfield (@ProfPadfield) July 30, 2019
"In 2018, Siemens and eight partners, including NXP, announced their participation in an initiative known as the Charter of Trust, which provides a set of common principles designed to reduce cyber-risk broadly." https://t.co/NcFF1aug1o #corpgov
— Stefan Padfield (@ProfPadfield) July 25, 2019
2/2 SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce "faulted the commission’s staff for abusing tools like 'no-action letters' and 'guidance' to create 'secret law,' free from judicial or legislative review." https://t.co/JrFlgiuPvJ #corpgov
— Stefan Padfield (@ProfPadfield) July 25, 2019
https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/business_law/2019/07/icymi-corpgov-midweek-roundup-july-31-2019.html