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Y Combinator's Immigration Attorney Engages Startup Community in Live Q&A

Last updated: 2026-05-01 17:16:49 · Privacy & Law

Breaking: Immigration Attorney for Y Combinator Startups Hosts Live Q&A

Peter Roberts, a prominent immigration attorney serving Y Combinator and startup clients, launched an 'Ask Me Anything' (AMA) session today on Hacker News. The event offers founders and entrepreneurs a rare chance to discuss visa strategies and immigration hurdles directly with an expert deeply embedded in the startup ecosystem.

Y Combinator's Immigration Attorney Engages Startup Community in Live Q&A

Roberts will be active for the next six hours, responding to questions on a broad spectrum of immigration topics. He stressed that his answers will remain general and factual, as he cannot give specific legal advice without reviewing all case details.

“I’ll be guided by whatever you’re interested in,” Roberts wrote in his opening post. “Please remember that I can’t provide legal advice on specific cases because I won’t have access to all the facts.”

The thread has already generated significant engagement, with 62 points and 71 comments in its initial hours. The full discussion can be viewed at the original Hacker News post.

Background

Roberts is a long-time immigration attorney whose practice focuses on the needs of high-growth startups, particularly those backed by Y Combinator. His previous AMA threads on Hacker News have become a recurring resource for founders navigating U.S. work visas, green cards, and compliance issues.

These sessions are part of a series — earlier threads are archived under Roberts’ submission history on Hacker News. The current AMA continues that tradition, providing a public forum for pressing immigration questions during a period of evolving policy and increased startup activity.

What This Means

For startup founders, especially those reliant on global talent, Roberts’ AMA offers timely, practical guidance. His insights can help demystify complex visa pathways, such as the H-1B program, O-1 for extraordinary ability, and the EB-2 national interest waiver.

The format encourages candid, knowledge-sharing without the cost or formality of a legal consultation. However, participants must remember that general discussion does not replace personalized legal counsel. As Roberts reiterated, factual discussion is key — not case-specific advice.

The strong turnout — with dozens of comments within hours — underscores the high demand for accessible immigration expertise in the startup world. As immigration policies remain uncertain, such Q&A sessions may become an even more vital tool for founders seeking to hire and retain international talent.