It also creates a private right of action. That is completely different than the existing laws, which are enforceable by a state. The author of this bill knows it will chill the selling of anything that is remotely…
Okay, Elon (jk).
Do you happen to be currently in law school?
Similarly, finance people don’t consider interest rates/yields to be derivatives. So, on a bond “duration” is the first derivative of price with respect to yield, and “convexity” is the second derivative.
You could just write a script that lets you write an input and your spouse writes an input and then compares the two inputs without showing them - no need for hashing at all.
If you read something that is copyrighted and rewrite it from memory, that’s still copying for purposes of the copyright act. There are cases about music where that’s unintentionally happened and the inadvertent copier…
Well, for one, selling stuff at a yard sale isn’t non-taxable. But generally you don’t have to pay tax because you’re selling things for less than you bought them for (you have a personal loss that is non deductible).…
The receiver could always test it after the fact. If it didn’t work then I’m sure they would look closely for tampering and would have pretty good evidence that someone tried to defraud them. Seems risky.
Of course there were recommendation engines - they were called librarians.
It also creates a private right of action. That is completely different than the existing laws, which are enforceable by a state. The author of this bill knows it will chill the selling of anything that is remotely…
Okay, Elon (jk).
Do you happen to be currently in law school?
Similarly, finance people don’t consider interest rates/yields to be derivatives. So, on a bond “duration” is the first derivative of price with respect to yield, and “convexity” is the second derivative.
You could just write a script that lets you write an input and your spouse writes an input and then compares the two inputs without showing them - no need for hashing at all.
If you read something that is copyrighted and rewrite it from memory, that’s still copying for purposes of the copyright act. There are cases about music where that’s unintentionally happened and the inadvertent copier…
Well, for one, selling stuff at a yard sale isn’t non-taxable. But generally you don’t have to pay tax because you’re selling things for less than you bought them for (you have a personal loss that is non deductible).…
The receiver could always test it after the fact. If it didn’t work then I’m sure they would look closely for tampering and would have pretty good evidence that someone tried to defraud them. Seems risky.
Of course there were recommendation engines - they were called librarians.