> One thing I didn’t understand from this article is what “giving investment advice” has to do with being an accredited investor and investing into startups. Can someone clarify that?
The article addresses this: the SEC accredited investor classification has several ways to qualify, the older ones are variants of “rich enough to presumably know what they are doing” and the newer ones added are “has one of a specified list of professional licenses/certifications that directly relate to knowing what they are doing with investments”, and the particular one that the author chose to pursue for that purpose was related to giving investment advice.
The article addresses this: the SEC accredited investor classification has several ways to qualify, the older ones are variants of “rich enough to presumably know what they are doing” and the newer ones added are “has one of a specified list of professional licenses/certifications that directly relate to knowing what they are doing with investments”, and the particular one that the author chose to pursue for that purpose was related to giving investment advice.