Every time I see things like these I'm reminded of my days studying for entrance exams for engineering here in India. Basically college classes are pretty useless, and you will have to attend tuition classes to get some additional coaching to crack these exams. Since this is the case, there are coaching classes that specialize in merely teaching you how to crack these exams. The only issue is, the competition is so fierce, <i>the coaching classes will have their own entrance exams to train you to prepare for the engineering entrance exam</i>. So you now have to crack two entrance exams, one to get into the coaching class that helps you crack the exam, and secondly crack the main exam itself.<p>Often you will spend pointless time just doing this circus. So much so you would be rather better off, directly working hard on the main exam.<p>Start ups are hard, you will likely fail certainly. In all that work there is to do. And all that stress, anxiety and tension you are likely to go on merely working on your start up. I wonder what is the point in taking all the pain to fight for a Visa amidst all this(Which you are very likely not to get).<p>There is no doubt there are amazing benefits of working in the USA. I would do anything to get an opportunity to work in the United States. But to get a H1-B(Or any work related visa) is a great challenge, especially for guys like me. Plus years of living under perennial threat of getting fired, losing your job, having to restart your green card process all over again(If you've started), and redoing all of this if you lose your job all over again, spending decades doing this and chasing sub goals. At some point you have to wonder, if its all worth it.<p>Why not spare yourself the pain. And work on the actual thing itself.
This is an excellent hack if it holds up on the legal fronts! There might be constraints, which I have not seen called out yet, such as - a H1B visa holder having to be employed in their field of specialization, hence the H1B founder will need to startup in said field. But the constraints appear trivial in comparison to the problem being solved. This is exciting!
I'm worried about the ownership of the startups. as they are developed by employees of Unshackled so to speak.<p>And what if a startup doesn't take off?