> Why do they reverse some claims but not others? I guess that is the question. I'll be interested in the bank's reply.
Honestly I don't know. I copied and pasted the text and punctuation from the original document and it put them there. I also didn't do the research. The office of Senator Warren did. You can quibble with them. :)
I'm not going to do a lot of research here but one thing I remember reading about was an uptick in Android Ransomware. https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/security/blog/2020/10/08/sop... In the article it explains how…
"Banks are not repaying customers who contest “unauthorized” Zelle payments – potentially violating federal law and CFPB rules." I suppose you and Senator Warren have different definitions for unauthorized.
The U.S. Senate begs to differ. Consumers defrauded on Zelle are left high and dry by the banks that created it [pdf] (senate.gov) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37438934
Like with most languages, learning the language is easy. Learning all the libraries, especially the undocumented proprietary ones, is the hard part.
I never understood this mentality myself. I use parts libraries all the time. Whether or not I drew the symbol, I still have to double check it as it's not like every symbol I every drew comes out perfectly the first…
I think the general idea is credit cards take care of the card holders. They've certainly always have taken care of me. And merchants are supposed to take care of themselves by raising prices. The system is certainly…
I don't think that one can't add security and verification, etc. I think the issue is those things are not free and it is supposed that adding them would just transform Zelle into something more akin to a credit card,…
> SiFive was working on CoC (theorum prover) extensions to validate designs using formal methods. THAT sounds fascinating, but I'm not sure how they would monetize it. Synopsys seems to think it's a decent business to…
I definitely agree with the primary point, "building a chip that meets specfic requirements we got from the customer" is not easy and is what matters. However, RISCV cores abound. In pretty much any HDL known to man…
Here's a class at MIT that takes undergraduates who don't even know verilog and at then end of the class they have a mostly passable RV32I. Admittedly pushing that through VLSI CAD will not be push-button easy but many…
> Why do they reverse some claims but not others? I guess that is the question. I'll be interested in the bank's reply.
Honestly I don't know. I copied and pasted the text and punctuation from the original document and it put them there. I also didn't do the research. The office of Senator Warren did. You can quibble with them. :)
I'm not going to do a lot of research here but one thing I remember reading about was an uptick in Android Ransomware. https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/security/blog/2020/10/08/sop... In the article it explains how…
"Banks are not repaying customers who contest “unauthorized” Zelle payments – potentially violating federal law and CFPB rules." I suppose you and Senator Warren have different definitions for unauthorized.
The U.S. Senate begs to differ. Consumers defrauded on Zelle are left high and dry by the banks that created it [pdf] (senate.gov) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37438934
Like with most languages, learning the language is easy. Learning all the libraries, especially the undocumented proprietary ones, is the hard part.
I never understood this mentality myself. I use parts libraries all the time. Whether or not I drew the symbol, I still have to double check it as it's not like every symbol I every drew comes out perfectly the first…
I think the general idea is credit cards take care of the card holders. They've certainly always have taken care of me. And merchants are supposed to take care of themselves by raising prices. The system is certainly…
I don't think that one can't add security and verification, etc. I think the issue is those things are not free and it is supposed that adding them would just transform Zelle into something more akin to a credit card,…
> SiFive was working on CoC (theorum prover) extensions to validate designs using formal methods. THAT sounds fascinating, but I'm not sure how they would monetize it. Synopsys seems to think it's a decent business to…
I definitely agree with the primary point, "building a chip that meets specfic requirements we got from the customer" is not easy and is what matters. However, RISCV cores abound. In pretty much any HDL known to man…
Here's a class at MIT that takes undergraduates who don't even know verilog and at then end of the class they have a mostly passable RV32I. Admittedly pushing that through VLSI CAD will not be push-button easy but many…