The legal world needs to shed its ‘unicorniphobia’

Alexander I. Platt Contributor

Alexander I. Platt is an associate professor at the University of Kansas School of Law.

Once upon a time, a successful startup that reached a certain maturity would “go public” — selling securities to ordinary investors, perhaps listing on a national stock exchange and taking on the privileges and obligations of a “public company” under federal securities regulations.

Times have changed. Successful startups today are now able to grow quite large without public capital markets. Not so long ago, a private company valued at more than $1 billion was rare enough to warrant the nickname “unicorn.”

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