Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit login

I always felt that something's amiss when you name your Korea fund "500 Kimchi" and let that hit media headlines.

I mean wouldn't people in South Korea find this to be derogatory?




Good question: would they?

If you named your Canadian fund “500 Maples”, nobody would have a problem.

“500 Poutines” just wouldn’t get taken seriously.


I think when you swap south korea for canada, which is pretty culturally identical to america, you lose all the history of racism against eastern people and countries. So I wouldn't blame them if they did, and I would kind of expect them to actually, and would consider alternate views exceptions or even misguided. Its not necessarilly bad but it looks pretty bad.


It works both ways though - there is plenty racism from many in the east against western people both black and white. As a (very!) white person I've experienced this first hand in several places in Asia.


I'm in Thailand and there's a fund here called 500 tuktuks. The local startup people I talked to didn't find it offensive.


Can’t seem to find a translation: what does kimchi mean in Korean?

Edit: never mind. Found it. Haha.


For anybody else curious, it's a fermented cabbage side dish, really delicious in my opinion :)


Hmm...either I haven't found it or...it means "Kimchi" but you didn't originally know what Kimchi was (seems unlikely..)


I thought it mean "love" for some reason... maybe I'm thinking of a different Korean word.


It’s a local dish/recipe...not very startup-py I’d say...


I believe it is fermented cabbage.


So more startuppy than it might first appear then




Join us for AI Startup School this June 16-17 in San Francisco!

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: