MOST companies raise money by selling an interest in the company, called shares. If there are a million shares in the OS, and you buy 10000 shares, you own 1% of the company and can vote on certain company actions, etc.
With QASP, every share you buy adds the equivalent of 6 shares to the pot controlled by the series A preferred share holders.
This anomaly exists for both the value of the share and it's voting power. As such, a common shareholder will NEVER have a voice in the company, and the preferred shareholders can do as they please to the commons. In the case of QASP, they use them as an ATM, and will never pass anything of value on to them...