Company: IDVV
Filing Date: 2025-09-18
Form Type: 10-12G/A
Source: 0001683168-25-007099
Chunk: 129

Company: ModuLink Inc.
Filing Date: 2025-09-18
Form: 10-12G/A
Chunk 129
---
 the target corporation’s
disinterested stockholders. The statute specifies three thresholds: one-fifth or more but less than one-third, one-third but less than
a majority, and a majority or more, of the outstanding voting power. Generally, once an acquirer crosses one of the above thresholds,
those shares in an offer or acquisition and acquired within 90 days thereof become “control shares” and such control shares
are deprived of the right to vote until disinterested stockholders restore the right.

These provisions also provide
that if control shares are accorded full voting rights and the acquiring person has acquired a majority or more of all voting power, all
other stockholders who do not vote in favor of authorizing voting rights to the control shares are entitled to demand payment for the
fair value of their shares in accordance with statutory procedures established for dissenters’ rights.

| 69 |

The effect of the Nevada control
share statutes is that the acquiring person, and those acting in association with the acquiring person, will obtain only such voting rights
in the control shares as are conferred by a resolution of the disinterested stockholders at an annual or special meeting. The Nevada control
share law, if applicable, could have the effect of discouraging takeovers of our company.

A corporation may elect to
not be governed by, or “opt out” of, the control share provisions by making an election in its articles of incorporation or
bylaws, provided that the opt-out election must be in place on the 10th day following the date an acquiring person has acquired a controlling
interest, that is, crossing any of the three thresholds described above. Our Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation state that
we have elected not to be governed by the “control share” provisions.

| Item 12. | Indemnification of Directors and Officers |

Subsection 7 of Section 78.138
of the Nevada Revised Statutes (the “Nevada Law”) provides that, subject to certain very limited statutory exceptions, a director
or officer is not individually liable to the corporation or its stockholders or creditors for any damages as a result of any act or failure
to act in his or her capacity as a director or officer, unless it is proven that the act or failure to act constituted a breach of his
or her fiduciary duties as a director or officer and such breach of those duties involved intentional misconduct, fraud or a knowing violation
of law. The statutory standard of liability established by Section