fcolas
- Karma
- 18
- Created
- March 14, 2014 (12y ago)
- Submissions
- 0
Focus on risk management intelligence (SaaS), statistical epidemiology, and statistical learning (ML/AI, PhD) for the e-commerce and in public health.
+ www.fabricecolas.me
+ www.risk-management-intelligence.com
+ www.oriskami.com
> Unfortunately people are not 100% trustable, devices are not 100% secure and code is not 100% perfect. - which is actually why you use crypto. > If someone steals my credit number, I will likely not be on the hook for…
+1
You're right that timing is key, however: >> Crypto = Trust (100%) << which is why (in my viewpoint) it matters a great deal, and there's just no way back. Trust is required for monetary exchange, but not only. It also…
@southbaybox, I've seen a similar issue a few months back: . https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=19126301 (2019-02-08, crypto-currencies) For a few years I worked on a startup that aimed to address fraud management in…
- How did you guys scale that much w/o a bootloader before? That's what I don't get. All the design patterns are those of Unix. You boot the kernel with a ... bootloader. Then you've the kernel with all the system's…
I have a dataset management mechanism (delete, copy, duplicate, etc.) where dataset attributes are tagged as PII (personally identifiable information), and where generic filters are then applied to obfuscate PII for…
+1, tomasdpinho. Yes to everything, and notably the queues everywhere, versioning the models, and the issue to mix sync and async (go for queues). As a scientist designing risk management systems, I also like to: .…
Nice read. And a related reading is "how we impersonate users" [1] by eager.io (not related to them). I particularly like their sudo-button--smart [1] https://eager.io/blog/how-we-impersonate-users/
Didn't know that one. Powerful. Thanks!
Nice article; thanks. * * * . Tesla claims: A 40% crash rate reduction with the autopilot as compared to no autopilot, over an 18 month period [1]. . If this is true—and we could imagine it is (at least partially?)—then…
Yes, I read something like that too :-) It's definitively not clearly mentioned and we could (still) qualify the procedure as 'obscur'. Though the same would hold for France- or Delaware-based comps. Generally: - on…
Ok And back to LHV, I've seen the PayPal account verification deposit (two payments of a few cents made to one's account) appear extremely fast on the account—I think it was less than one hour.
I'm within the 1st year of e-residency + incorporation. Here're a few of my experiences. 1. Setup is not as straightforward as they claim, but it's still quite easy. It compares well to what I've seen in France…
+1 A bit of back and forth for the KYC process, but the onboarding process and the team are quite good and to the point.
LHV is for the merchant account, it's needed for EveryPay. Their price structure is not fully pay as you go: - there're no setup fees; but - there's a fixed monthly fee—a so called terminal fee of 20EUR; and - then…