@OLLFB wrote:
Countries that have a concept similar to that of a public offering generally have more or less precise exceptions, such as the concept of a public company in the United States, which impose significant obligations on the companies concerned, but which they can escape by complying with the strict rules contained in a certain number of "safe harbors" approaching the concept of a private placement.
In short, I don't care in this subject of discussion.
EA has no respect for gamers and therefore its own customers.
Well EA fired some 670 employees because they were losing money, and the value of the company still lost over 1%. Those 670 employees on the street looking for a job, or delivering pizza to feed their kids couldn't care less about our little feeling for a stupid golf game not making money and abandoned.