We have been constantly approached by potential investors, hedge funds and SEC attorneys who state we'd vault into the Top 5 social media platforms on the planet if we went public and issued an IPO.As such, we have prepared our Registration Statement, which our counsels believe will be deemed "effective," and have begun gathering data for public reporting requirements as set forth in the Exchange Act. Going public has many pros and many cons. I personally am not sold yet on the idea. As we roll into 2024 and the upcoming election cycle, it would seem that now is a potentially great time to do such. Companies go public for a number of reasons, and these reasons can be different for each company. Some of the reasons include:* To raise capital and potentially broaden opportunities for future access to capital.* To increase liquidity for a company’s stock, which may allow owners and employees to sell stock more easily.* To acquire other businesses with the public company’s stock.* To attract and compensate employees with public company stock and stock-options.* To create publicity, brand awareness, or prestige for a company.There are many important factors to consider when going public:* A company’s public offering will take time and money to accomplish.* The company will take on significant new obligations, such as filing SEC reports and keeping shareholders and the market informed about the company's business operations, financial condition, and management, which will take a significant amount of time for your company’s management and result in additional costs.* The company and owner(s) may be liable if these new legal obligations are not satisfied.* The company may lose some flexibility in managing company affairs, particularly when public shareholders must approve your company’s actions.* Information about the company, such as financial statements and disclosures about material contracts, customers and suppliers, will become available to the general public (including competitors).On the scale of things in terms of contrast to the size of our userbase, Wimkin has very few investors and shareholders. Should we go public, it would stand to reason this group would profit significantly. I would love to hear from you all on whether you'd like Wimkin to go public or remain private. Please feel free to comment below or email me at jsheppard@dreamteamwebdesign.com. If you'd like to discuss potentially investing or buying shares while we're privately held, please email me at jsheppard@dreamteamwebdesign.com. We have done everything correctly as a start up company, have extremely low debt, have an interface, features and infrastructure worth multi millions of dollars without factoring in a single user, and our reputation as fighters for freedom precedes us. 2024 knows no limit to where we can grow as it stands to be the most tumultuous political landscape ripe with mass censorship. The opportunities are truly unlimited if we stand together. The time to explore this is now, as a platform, together. Thank you.
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Nick Popescu
Is there a tendency in the name?
WIMKIN = WORLD IS MY KIN !
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Jeromimo Vasquez
What prompted this question? And what are you stating or maybe implying? ???

Sheree Black
You might want to look at what the FCC will be voting on next week before you jump into something..
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