You could say the same for most of the modern internet, but please don't brother.
So, just the stuff that's really bad for the environment. Gotcha
A reminder that the world is burning: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=29769892 134TWh to maintain the blockchain last year, for 4 transactions per second. Some nuclear power stations generate slightly more than…
Since bitcoin has no RRP, what is the context in which a retail "sale" makes sense?
You're clearly really into this planet destroying ponzi scheme. You keep referring to something as a "sale". You have no way to compare the current price to the future price. Perhaps you portfolio is still tulip/beanie…
In what sense can it ever go on "sale" in the context you keep using? It has no RRP.
I made no claim that it was a purely crypto mindset, they've flogged this phrase to death, and continue to do so in their echo chamber communities.
> Everything is on sale. Such meaningless phrasing. If something wasn't on sale, nobody could buy it. The crypto meme of dips in the price being 'a sale' is key to hooking the uniformed new fish into the great ponzi…
Care to explain?
Keep telling yourself that
Delete all accounts, block all social media endpoints at DNS level. Nuke the site from orbit...
>That's hilarious. You'd think they'd know better than to trust code they did not write... Most humans trust code they didn't write
Home hub is a spectacularly poor piece of kit. Long start up time from powering on, high energy usage, really poor software (repeat soft bricking from remote updates at random times of day and night), historically awful…
> It also seems like the PhotoDNA hash algorithm is problematic (to the point where it may be possible to trigger false matches A post here some days ago (since removed) linked to a google drive containing generated…
Try reading the whole thread?
Reading the content from this person/organisation I don't believe this is poor wording, rather fairly standard scare tactics and threats.
The strategy seems to be to douse the office in petrol, lock the doors and star lightning matches while inside.
An expert in the field risks their life to save children, is accused of being a peadophile. That's a long way from being an a-hole.
Simpler times... 3 years ago...
Apps, account. Bin it all.
A wonderfully constructive comment that keep people using this site, or not.
> I like Valve's approach. Who is the real bad guy here? Valve are, leaving millions of users at risk, despite having been informed of an issue.
100% Agree. It's badly designed and badly implemented. Dangerous by design.
Introducing a safety hazard, likely to cause further issues, when vehicles are traveling at speed, with nowhere else to go. Good job on suggesting one way to make things much worse.
Also, what happens most of the time on UK motorways, drivers ignore the signage.
You could say the same for most of the modern internet, but please don't brother.
So, just the stuff that's really bad for the environment. Gotcha
A reminder that the world is burning: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=29769892 134TWh to maintain the blockchain last year, for 4 transactions per second. Some nuclear power stations generate slightly more than…
Since bitcoin has no RRP, what is the context in which a retail "sale" makes sense?
You're clearly really into this planet destroying ponzi scheme. You keep referring to something as a "sale". You have no way to compare the current price to the future price. Perhaps you portfolio is still tulip/beanie…
In what sense can it ever go on "sale" in the context you keep using? It has no RRP.
I made no claim that it was a purely crypto mindset, they've flogged this phrase to death, and continue to do so in their echo chamber communities.
> Everything is on sale. Such meaningless phrasing. If something wasn't on sale, nobody could buy it. The crypto meme of dips in the price being 'a sale' is key to hooking the uniformed new fish into the great ponzi…
Care to explain?
Keep telling yourself that
Delete all accounts, block all social media endpoints at DNS level. Nuke the site from orbit...
>That's hilarious. You'd think they'd know better than to trust code they did not write... Most humans trust code they didn't write
Home hub is a spectacularly poor piece of kit. Long start up time from powering on, high energy usage, really poor software (repeat soft bricking from remote updates at random times of day and night), historically awful…
> It also seems like the PhotoDNA hash algorithm is problematic (to the point where it may be possible to trigger false matches A post here some days ago (since removed) linked to a google drive containing generated…
Try reading the whole thread?
Reading the content from this person/organisation I don't believe this is poor wording, rather fairly standard scare tactics and threats.
The strategy seems to be to douse the office in petrol, lock the doors and star lightning matches while inside.
An expert in the field risks their life to save children, is accused of being a peadophile. That's a long way from being an a-hole.
Simpler times... 3 years ago...
Apps, account. Bin it all.
A wonderfully constructive comment that keep people using this site, or not.
> I like Valve's approach. Who is the real bad guy here? Valve are, leaving millions of users at risk, despite having been informed of an issue.
100% Agree. It's badly designed and badly implemented. Dangerous by design.
Introducing a safety hazard, likely to cause further issues, when vehicles are traveling at speed, with nowhere else to go. Good job on suggesting one way to make things much worse.
Also, what happens most of the time on UK motorways, drivers ignore the signage.