True, but in practice "blockchain" implies some sort of distributed consensus. Except for private blockchains, which are totally brain-dead.
>There are many uses for blockchain other than as a cryptocurrency. Name one.
That's everywhere on Windows. They did the same thing to try to railroad people into installing Windows 10. They do the same thing for every software upgrade. OS X isn't much better.
It is my understanding that a contract must provide some benefit (consideration) to both parties. That NDA benefited only your (former) employer with no benefit to you, so I'm not sure it's enforceable. I'm not a lawyer.
True, but in practice "blockchain" implies some sort of distributed consensus. Except for private blockchains, which are totally brain-dead.
>There are many uses for blockchain other than as a cryptocurrency. Name one.
That's everywhere on Windows. They did the same thing to try to railroad people into installing Windows 10. They do the same thing for every software upgrade. OS X isn't much better.
It is my understanding that a contract must provide some benefit (consideration) to both parties. That NDA benefited only your (former) employer with no benefit to you, so I'm not sure it's enforceable. I'm not a lawyer.