I feel like complaining about things being "undemocratic" is like complaining about a software system's architecture that "it's not microservices". Not everything needs to be - and some things would be actively harmed by making them "democratic". I wouldn't want drug approval to be a democratic process.
Raising capital can be done "democratically" if the founders want to. They can use direct listing. IPO is an option, not an obligation.
> Not everything needs to be
Not everything, sure. But this one more than most, needs to be democratic. If you don't see the wealth inequality today in which the 1% own 50% of the worlds wealth, and you don't see where this is inevitably going to lead, then I don't know what to say.
Stay woke at r/latestagecapitalism
I'm pretty critical of how late capitalism is shaping up (I pretty routinely get called a leftist radical here on Hacker News which is increasingly Thiel-Aligned Psycho News).
With that said, lots of options exist for a company like Figma doing a public listing: when you're the belle of the ball you can list how you want. Google did a pretty unconventional Dutch Auction thing IIRC.
In this instance the Figma folks decided they wanted an IPO pop and had the underwriters set it up that way. They were paying some premium (to institutional investors) to get one of many intangibles that are attached to that (like a bunch of press about how hot the stock is).
In a world where it was a no-brainer that this was going to be another mediocre Adobe product line rent seeking from here to the horizon, I'm pretty OK with how this turned out.
And when Google did it, it was considered a disaster
Because when Google did it, it was a disaster?
https://www.cnbc.com/2014/08/18/pisani-googles-ipo-was-a-dis...
And “rent seeking” isn’t “The company is selling a product or service they make in a manner I don’t agree with”