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You're talking from a pure statistical standpoint. Yes, the probability that a random startup fails is higher than the probability that it succeeds. Nobody denies that. I doubt anybody said, "I predict Mighty is going to fail because most startups fail."

It's much better to argue on WHY people said that Mighty was a dubious product proposition -- from a first principles perspective. That way at least we can learn some lessons from it. Contrary to what people are saying, I doubt the reason for failure is that since Mighty's inception the browsing experience has gotten much faster. Because it really hasn't.

Mighty was as doomed in the beginning as it is now. -- and you know it if you've been using a web browser for the past few years. If you don't live in a bubble, you realize $30/month is absurd. These are the important points, not "most startups fail."



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