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> Interesting, Google spun off many companies under Alphabet umbrella, but essentially continues to provide base tooling/compute/IT support to them.

Those aren't actually spinoffs in the sense of what IBM is doing; "Google" was effectively just renamed "Alphabet", with its core business in a new subunit called "Google". They are all still within the same corporate ownership structure. Its an internal organizational change, not a separation into separately-owned organizations.




It's not that simple, for example Waymo has external investors alongside Alphabet, https://blog.waymo.com/2020/03/waymo-raises-first-external-i...


Sure, it's a bit more complicated, but the point here is that Waymo remains an Alphabet subsidiary, external investors are investing under that understanding and with full knowledge of Alphabet’s control of Waymo (which is why the blog entry you link to links to the Alphabet 10-Q reporting the external investments and the resulting “noncontrolling interests” in the subsidiary.

A “spin-off” within a common corporate umbrella is a different thing done for different reasons than a corporate divorce kind of spin-off like IBM is doing.




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