upvote
Show HN: 30u30.fyi – Is your startup founder on Forbes' most fraudulent list?

(30u30.fyi)

Reactions to this are a bit curious. It's a satirical comment on how (presumably) initially well-intentioned younger founder-types get swept up in / by perverse incentives. The implication is that younger people who are still figuring out who they are and coming into their own may be more susceptible to these kinds of incentive traps.

The first section that showcases the fraud that has been committed is something I have no problem with, just as I have no issue with web3isgoinggreat.com. The "at risk" section is based on a mathematical/algorithmic joke. This is explained by the "methodology" section below it, which makes it clear that the equation used to calculate "risk" here is not entirely unlike the Drake equation for the probability of extra-terrestrial life.[1]

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drake_equation

reply
It can be very difficult to say no to these incentives when they are presented.
reply
Committing fraud is never justified.
reply
Eh, I think selection effects are more prevalent than an earnest good faith actor who got swept up into perverse incentives.

Forbes 30u30 is a clarion call for the most ambitiously Machiavellian among us.

They’re not subject to any different incentives than the rest of us. But they’d certainly have a higher rate of sociopaths and more garden variety Machiavellis than genpop.

reply
I was curious to pin down the definition of Machiavellian:

> Manipulation & Deceit: Using charm, lies, and calculated moves to influence others.

> Lack of Empathy: A cold, detached, and unemotional demeanor that disregards the feelings of others.

> Strategic Long-Term Planning: Unlike impulsive psychopaths, high-Machs are patient, planning, and can delay gratification to ensure success.

> Cynical Worldview: Believing that people are inherently weak, untrustworthy, and that "the ends justify the means".

> Low Affect: Possessing limited emotional experience, often leading to a detached, "puppet-master" role rather than seeking the spotlight.

The only traits that seem bad are the lying and lack of empathy. The rest seem neutral (low emotional experience is something we hackers tend to identify with), sensible (random people tend to be untrustworthy), or admirable (delayed gratification).

Using charm and calculated moves to influence others isn’t a bad thing. It’s the basis of flattery.

I wish there was a positive version of Machiavellian which cut the lies and lack of empathy. Those are genuinely bad.

reply
> Using charm and calculated moves to influence others isn’t a bad thing. It’s the basis of flattery.

Flattery doesn't have to be calculated.

As to calculated moves, distinct things can fit the same labels. Intent, context, and execution are all important.

reply
That + AH or SB. Those are the kiss of death, especially when combined for the 30u30.
reply
30u30 are an artifact of networking not directly Machiavellianism/sociopathy; pals promote them (often as children of their pals) to the list.
reply
I think it’s because it’s slightly obvious it was vibe(coded && written).

Starts looking like low effort libel, punching down, more than some clever joke x a statistics exercise

Put another way: the Drake equation, this ain’t.

reply
Punching down? To companies worth twenties of billions of dollars?

The impulse to label everything a “startup” and thus a smolbean little guy is fascinating.

reply
Maybe you missed the bottom section? There's plenty of comments taking umbrage at it.

Alternatively, you think it's okay to make up stuff about young people because they got a seed round. That's stock-human behavior but it's not rational.

reply
I was specifically thinking of Cursor when I said “companies with twenty billion dollar valuations”.

My point, as I think was clear, was that criticising the founders of billion dollar companies via satire is not “punching down” by any means. Nor is it libel. You are throwing words around without meaning.

(and “young people”, there we go with the smolbean stuff again. If they’re too young to face criticism then they’re too young to be CEOs of billion dollar companies. You can’t have it both ways)

reply
You misunderstand what "punching down" or "libel" mean.
reply
Punching down??? These people are silicon valley founders.
reply
Some of these really don't make sense. The implication that Cursor is a fraudulent company is a little weird considering they actually have real users.

Like sure, is it a VS code fork with agents stapled to it? Yes. But are they on the same scale as most of the people mentioned? Ehh probably not.

It reads more like a hit piece from someone with a grudge against random SF companies than anything else.

reply
> The implication that Cursor is a fraudulent company is a little weird

To my reading the premise of the site is pretty straightforward: 30 Under 30 is a warning sign, not a positive signal. Therefore, as a company with 4 founders who were in 30 Under 30, Cursor is a risk.

It’s a silly little satire site, there’s a danger of reading into it too deeply.

reply
Yeah, and the reason 30 under 30 is a warning sign is because the founders that apply to and agree to do Forbes to do "30 under 30" are much more concerned with marketing than actually building a legitimate product. Legitimate under 30 founders are spending their time actually building instead.
reply
It looks like the score number is just the number of times featured multiplied by a constant.
reply
Maybe it was added after your comment but that section has a warning box calling the score a "deliberately absurd formula" and saying "this is comedy" in literal bold letters at the top. No one thinks it's serious and it's even clearly labeled as a joke just in case.
reply
Stopped clocks...
reply
What is a “satirical risk analysis” and am I to believe that the bottom section is built from anonymous submissions?
reply
deleted
reply
They should have left off the last section. No reason to shame founders if no wrong doing
reply
No reason to shame founders if no wrong doing

If there's no wrong-doing, then there's nothing of which to be ashamed.

reply
Missing /s at the end my dude.
reply
The "watchlist" made me a bit uncomfortable. I get that it's satire, but putting real people's names in a list of people you're (even jokingly) watching for fraud, and assigning a "risk factor" to them (even/especially if they acknowledge it's made up) borders on defamation in my book.
reply
The regular ones are okay. The watchlist is diabolical. Unvoted as soon as I saw the watchlist.
reply
half the watchlist is literally vaporware
reply
This is funny, because I know a bunch of 30 under 30s, and I've invested in a few. There is a strong overlap between 30 under 30 and YC founders.

I consider myself a good judge of character, because not one of the one's I've invested in has committed fraud!

reply
Would say, the 30 under 30 list has like 600 people, not 30. So the fraud rate is quite a bit lower than headlines of seemingly 2 / 30. Its more like 2 / 600, which is maybe the baseline fraud rate?
reply
Doesn't matter. It's always been based on vibes, now the vibe is fraud.
reply
If you didn't know, 30 under 30 doesn't have a selection process and you can literally apply and game your way into being mentioned. I honestly love the site and the UI. Great job! Would be nice to have some kind of thing for YC founders as well
reply
Whatever period we're supposed to call the entropic stage where postmodernism and "today's modernism" intertwine, this is THAT.
reply
Nice work.

In section The 30u30 Risk Index there is some css bug, text is in long lines outside of boxes.

reply
> Risk Index

> Mercor — 3x on 30u30

Interesting, I only know this company because they’re the leading spammer hitting my inbox in the AI job board category.

reply
More useful for most people: is the company you are considering doing business with run by one of these fine upstanding folks?
reply
The Nikola founder, and Anthony Levandowski for that matter (seems to have gone under the radar), have got to be the most egregious case of corruption and pay-for-play. It's so depressing that no one can do anything about it.
reply
Levandowski is back with TK at Atoms
reply
it's clear now his self-driving technology was never going to work at uber.
reply
It’s amusing and bemusing how these lists have become so associated with grifters and fraudsters.

It’s gotten to the point that legit folks are wanting to steer clear of them simply because of the negative stigma with being seen as an XuX grifter.

reply
Including "Dropout" as some significant metric is truly idiotic. Meekly going through a university degree isn't indicative of being a paragon of virtue or success, and it's a safe bet that most higher end convicted fraudsters had a degree, probably an advanced one (i.e. the large majority of politicians in that group.)
reply
the stupidity to this is that it takes a meme and treats it like facts

yes, numerous 30u30 have committed frauds, and yes this list is a paid list. but it's also full of other people who have been duped by what this list represents. compounding memes at the expense of truth just creates more problems than it solves

reply
it’s not a paid list. Or at least it wasn’t, can’t say with certainty it didn’t change.
reply
I know several 30u30 people in my country's list and I highly doubt they paid for anything.
reply
Some people on the list likely paid to be on it. They likely didn't pay Forbes the company though and maybe the payment was just invites to parties.
reply
deleted
reply
I've met several of the people on the first few pages on the watch list, and they are among the sketchiest Silicon Valley people I've met. The criteria are plausible.
reply
How old is this site, because most of the reference links are dead links
reply
Probably ran out of tokens halfway through
reply
Is the formula based on the actual probabilities. I’m pretty sure you could do that, but it’s not clear it it.
reply
This seems extremely mean spirited.
reply
Some of the comments are unnecessary, but things like this:

> wiping $40B and several people's life savings

Okay, you shouldn't dump your life savings into a cryptocurrency that claims to be doing innovative things in the first 2 days. But if that's true that guy ruined multiple people's life's work. That's a bit mean-spirited, wouldn't you say?

reply
To put it into context, 40 billion dollars is about 22,000 average lifetime earnings of a man in the US.
reply
Did you read the page? The first portion is whatever, but then it lists random founders with no record of doing anything nefarious based on a random ranking list. It's literally bullying.
reply
Correct. It's abusive to apply probabilistic AI models to real human individuals and penalize them for things they haven't even done yet with no recourse.

I hope you will remember this the next time your employer asks you to build an AI moderation, credit evaluation, or anti-fraud system that will harm much larger numbers of innocent people far than one mean website.

reply
deleted
reply
deleted
reply
Yes, but so? It provides a modicum of balance versus relentless hype by founders and the doting media. Even if not true it might remind people to have some healthy skepticism. The fact that your reflex is to find it "extremely mean spirited" speaks volumes. Everyone else in life gets shat apron because of other people's unscrupulous behavior, why are these people special? People should assume that there is a good chance any business venture is a fraud.

Ultimately it's one guy's opinion. It's not like he's going to ruin these people's lives or businesses.

reply
deleted
reply
I wouldn’t work for a company where the founder/ceo was younger than 35 and had zero real world experience.
reply
avoid people that need narcissistic supply at all cost.
reply
I'm all for the big names and ones that have proven issues and companies like Delve to be shamed

But Cursor? Why they are operating in a risky space on tech that is all new what ethical things did they do to warrent inclusion in this shame board?

Lets not tarnish folks either -cancel culture is worrisome there

reply
I’ve been in the startup and scientific community for 25 years now and during that that time I’ve run across about two dozen 30 under 30s. Every single one with exception of two were douchebags.

I think a reason it so over represented by douchebags is because the awardees — unlike McArthur winners — are very involved in the nomination process and work to game the system.

https://thegenzeoclub.substack.com/p/forbes-30-under-30-nomi...

reply
We're Missing the biggest frauds of all time: https://www.whitehouse.gov/

When your president is a complete fraud and con man, the whole country is tarnished - its too late for America to bounce back, we are in end stage capitalism now that Trump and his cronies are siphoning money out of the boundaries his administration establish -no different than Putin and his oligrachs except that America still has some protections in place..

reply
[dead]
reply
[dead]
reply
[dead]
reply
[dead]
reply
[dead]
reply
[flagged]
reply
reply
deleted
reply
The european mind cannot comprehend.
reply
[flagged]
reply
I don’t know, it reads more like a “told you so” than envy to me. I don’t get the impression the author wants to be these people.

“Told you so” can be quite a tranquil feeling.

reply
Why do you think they’re jealous of fraudsters?
reply
What fraud have any of the companies under "risk index" committed?
reply
Which bit of "risk index" are you not getting?

Alternatively: how are you in a position to claim they're 100% not frauds?

reply
So I have to prove they aren't fraud otherwise they are fraud by default. Makes perfect sense.
reply
Why do you think they’re jealous of future fraudsters?

But like genuinely, this sort of take confuses me so much. It’s like, if someone made fun of Putin and the consensus was that they’re just jealous they don’t have a country of their own to run.

reply
percentage wise they have more billionaires than frauds on the list, at least so far.
reply
Forbes "30 under 30" actually has like 600 people a year in 20 categories, and that's just in the USA. Add in international lists and the number rises to well over 1000. Since 2011 there have probably been, what, 10-15 thousand total "honorees"? ~12 instances of fraud in total is probably significantly below the corporate average.

And the "risk index" is idiotic. Basically just companies the creator doesn't like, or is jealous of.

reply
There was a running total of $18.5 B in fraud from inductees. That’s about half of the size of card fraud. Maybe 2% of worldwide fraud.
reply
Is "30 under 30" one of those schemes that require people to put themselves forward and maybe pay a fee? I've seen a bunch of "awards" (particularly for companies) that follow the same model.
reply
Some might say a list of "30" that in fact includes thousands of people every year is itself a bit fishy.
reply
What is a person who makes a site like this thinking about when they do it?

What is their motivation? What are they trying to achieve?

reply
They’re pointing out fraud. Is that a bad thing now?

I think it’s fair game to point out that the the 30 under 30 hype list is just that: hype. And there’s often very little substance underneath hype. And sometimes there’s outright deceit under it.

reply
well why was Cursor included amongst known fraudsters.. that just seems mean and warrentless
reply
In the section that says:

100% SATIRICAL — SCORES ARE FICTIONAL AND DO NOT REFLECT REAL-WORLD FRAUD RISK

?

Personally I think it’s not a bad thing to be a little skeptical about brand new companies with double digit billion dollar valuations. If they’re legit they can more than withstand a little satirical dig.

reply
I think the site likely started off as a meme. However it also seems to have a bit of a "hit piece" vibe to it in the last section
reply
Seems like there should be an incarcerated stamp for people who were in jail for fraud but later got out, like Shkreli.
reply
How about a fraud prison tat? Murderers have teardrops.
reply
To be specific, not all teardrops indicate that the person is a murderer. The teardrop is specifically in remembrance of someone else who was killed.

An empty teardrop indicates the death hasn’t been avenged; a half-filled one that someone else killed the killer; and only a full teardrop means that person killed the killer.

reply
You see, a pimp's love is very different from that of a square.
reply
Tattooed on their forehead?
reply