Civil War Man wrote:Even controlling a majority of shares doesn't give him carte blanche. Minority shareholders could, for instance, bring a class-action lawsuit against him for failing in his fiduciary duty to consider their interests, and they'd have a good case if they could uncover instances of, for example, Stark using company resources on personal projects.
This is true.
That said, unlike most real billionaire's, Tony Stark's personal abilities are one of the keys to his company's success. He may well have successfully convinced minority investors that letting him invent and design on the company's behalf, while giving him access to company fabricators and machinery, is worth giving him discretion to design personal projects. Because giving him freedom to work on projects of his own choosing has probably netted the company billions in the past.
FaxModem1 wrote:Point, I said regulate by the Department of Energy, not ban. If every city had a Stark Tower like reactor, that would do a lot for the world. I'm just saying that there should be heightened security in case someone tries to turn it into a bomb or abscond with it during transport.
We still have nuclear reactors after all, they're not something locked up in a vault that mankind can't use, but the average Joe on the street can't buy plutonium at a hardware store. I'm thinking similar restraints when it comes to the materials for stark reactors.
Thing is,
governments can obtain nuclear fuel without too much trouble. It's difficult for "rogue" governments to do so, sure. But that's mainly because bomb-grade fissile materials aren't like arc reactors. They cannot be made in a cave with a box of scraps. Vanko made his first arc reactor on a quite limited budget too- although to be fair he already knew the design or could reasonably deduce it. But then, by now so much Starktech has been made and dispersed (especially Ultron drones) that it seems unlikely that salvaged arc reactors aren't available if you're willing to pay enough money for one.
The original stated concern wasn't to prevent arc reactor-based terrorism. It was to prevent arms races between governments. And that is simply not practical in my opinion. Bans on the technology won't be perfectly reliable, and ultimately the nations that comply with a ban on militarized arc reactors will wind up at a major disadvantage compared to ones that don't.
This ties into someone else's quote, too...
Civil War Man wrote:Simon_Jester wrote:The big problem there is that we'd basically have to keep constantly editing the relevant section of the Accords to stop any "too advanced" technology from being used by the military. Moreover, all this systematic effort to suppress advanced weapons technology would have the net effect of badly weakening the world's defenses against an alien or supernatural threat, because it means that our military technology becomes in effect stagnant.
We already do that. New technology comes out, and we have to change how we look at the world in order to accommodate that. When e-mail came out, we created rules on the appropriate use of e-mail by government officials. It didn't stop e-mail from happening.
And banning military applications of certain technologies not about stopping technology that is "too advanced", but preventing nations from committing atrocities. Militaries are not allowed to use poisoned weapons. They're not allowed to use tear gas. They're not allowed to use spike traps. They're not allowed to use flamethrowers in urban centers. They're not allowed to use land mines made from plastic. They're not allowed to use chemical and biological weapons. Those technologies aren't "too advanced."
Whereas arc reactors would have to be prohibited
entirely because they are too advanced. Literally all they do is provide electrical power more efficiently than existing engines and generators. They're not weapons in and of themselves. They're certainly not unusually inhumane weapons the way poison gas or undetectable land mines are.
Moreover, the demand for them in places like civilian aviation (as electric motors driving engines, if nothing else) will tend to create a situation where militaries can literally buy them off the shelf. You can't do that with nerve gas or land mines.