• phdepressed@sh.itjust.works
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    2 days ago

    These same advances could be owned by all of us if we hadn’t spent every year since Kennedy whittling away at NASAs budget to do stuff. The space shuttle was only ever supposed to be temporary but Congress never funded the much better replacements.

    SpaceX only brings its shareholders forward, with our tax money. The problem isn’t about the technology but who owns the tech.

    • lemming@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      Which shareholders do you mean? SpaceX is private company, no shares.

      Launch vehicle development by NASA is by their own admission slower and more expensive. It’s no coincidence that the whole industry started moving forward much faster when a driven private company with financial interests at heart and without strong dependence on politicians started their own serious development.

      As for the tax money paid to SpaceX, NASA simply bought services. They also helped with development. But whatever the expenses were, they were much lower than they would be if NASA did it the old way. By the way, the old way is similar, but instead of SpaceX, the money went to Boeing, Lockheed Martin etc. and there wasn’t a limit on how much money it will be in advance. Now you know that if the costs exceed the agreed sum, it won’t be paid by public money, but by the company. As seen with Starliner, which went so badly that Boeing said they are never doing fixed-price contracts ever again. They are used to the excess money paid from the public budget. In exchange for these advantages to the public, SpaceX can use the vehcle developed unther the contract on their own, without NASA. Therefore you can get missions such as Polaris, Inspiration4 or Axiom. Your opinion on these may be different, but I think private missions and influx of private money into spaceflight is good for spaceflight in general. It makes it more financially sustainable and more efficient.

      • thatKamGuy@sh.itjust.works
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        1 day ago

        Private companies can and do have shares; it’s how ownership is distributed amongst individuals.

        All it means is that those shares are not available for public trading on stock exchanges. Instead, the shares are owned and traded privately among a select group of investors.

        • lemming@sh.itjust.works
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          3 hours ago

          Huh, good point, I never thought about that. Makes sense. I only ever heard about options to get shares when the company becomes publicly traded. Of course, publicly traded is what I meant.

          Do the owners also get money based on the shares?

    • starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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      2 days ago

      I do think there’s a significant difference in approach. NASA has a focus on doing it once and doing it right, SpaceX has a focus on doing it as many times as physically possible and learning a tremendous amount from the many, many failures. Be honest, did anyone genuinely believe that rocket would be successfully captured on the first attempt?

      If it had blown up, oh well. That’s SpaceX’s whole thing. If a NASA rocket blows up, it’s a big fucking deal, and suddenly we don’t show shuttle launches in schools anymore

      • phdepressed@sh.itjust.works
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        2 days ago

        That is again due to how they are treated and funding constriction. NASA has not received the same “grace” in failures that you are giving SpaceX. They’d love to do more missions and they’re also better about doing things right. You should know whether your rocket works before it’s launched just like a bridge needs to work as built. NASA also doesn’t get money from it’s missions. Whatever they put in orbit doesn’t generate revenue it is only for public data gathering.

        That is such a crass reference to Challenger… SpaceX mishaps so far have not killed people. Will you still be giving them leeway when they do?

        • starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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          2 days ago

          I don’t think I’m wrong at all to suggest that they have different philosophies when it comes to launching rockets. The reason behind that is worth talking about, but the fact remains that they have different philosophies. Personally, I would love for NASA to get funding exceeding SpaceX’s funds. We could certainly afford it. But no matter how much funding they get, Joe Public will get pissed about wasted tax dollars if NASA starts blowing up rockets. SpaceX, while partially publicly funded, is ostensibly a private company, which allows them some leeway in the eyes of the public when it comes to blowing up rockets.

          SpaceX mishaps so far have not killed people. Will you still be giving them leeway when they do?

          What kind of leeway do you think I’m giving SpaceX? What kind of leeway do you think I’m not giving NASA? Consider the fact that I’m morally consistent. Do you think you can answer your question yourself?