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Blockchain is here to stay, this is way past the point of "believing in the tech" - recently an wss:// order book exchange (Hyperliquid) crossed $1T volume traded, and they started in 2023.

Blockchains are becoming real-time data structures where everyone has admin level read-only access to everyone.


HN doesn't like blockchain. They had the chance to get in very early and now they're salty. I first heard about bitcoin on HN, before Silk Road made headlines.


I got involved with bitcoin in 2010. I co-founded a bitcoin unicorn. It is exactly because of this experience that I’m salty on blockchain.


"HN doesn't like blockchain"

HN not believe blockchain same way Apple,Microsoft,Google etc does


The privacy concerns and “ID everyone” are the boring, standard dystopian parts of this, perfectly in line with the government-by-nannying that Canberra types enjoy.

The better question is what counts as social media? Is HN social media that under 16yo Australians need to be kept away from?


I'm not sure that there is a proven link between hacker news use and elevated probability of depression and anxiety in children and adolescents.

So I guess it's aimed at sites that are supposed to cause these problems?


> I'm not sure that there is a proven link between hacker news use and elevated probability of depression and anxiety in children and adolescents.

We can extend that thought further than just HN. The reporter (surprisingly!) brings up something we've known for a while but has been slow getting traction. That the relation between noted harms and SM is far from clear.

     There really is not a super clear causal link between greater use of social media and upticks in anxiety and depression among teens. 
More detail: https://www.techdirt.com/2023/12/18/yet-another-massive-stud...

Regarding youth mental health, there are strong causal competitors (to SM) that aren't well examined. Like the elimination of free roaming areas (from sq mi to sq ft), attacks on child independence (false stranger danger messaging) and car culture + trespassing culture (traded endless walkable areas for narrow death zones).

I argue that since mid-1900s, we've eradicated most of what kids needed to learn complex problem solving, develop ambition and earn self-esteem.

If I wanted to erode youth mental health, I'd do exactly what we've done. I'd get rid of irreplaceable environments where youth experienced critical growth.


The issue here is regardless of implementation details (all the privacy/ID stuff falls in this bucket), the remedy being proposed here seems obviously much worse than the ailment.


With o1 pro you're paying for unlimited compute that you don't get with $20 + capped o1.


There's a need to be pragmatic here; In the event of any kinetic Chinese aggression, TSMC (and other co's) fabs are going to be rendered inoperable, regardless of how well executed a US response is.


There is a difference between "this code does things in ways I don't like" and "this code does things in ways nobody likes"


This might be the first launch that tops the jaw-dropping excitement of the Falcon 9 LZ-1 landing way back in 2015. Godspeed starship and best of luck to all the SpaceX team.


… and the dual landings from the first Falcon Heavy flight. Even today that footage looks like cgi


The live view of a Starship fin being attacked by plasma during reentry was pretty close too.


The dual landings for me were far superior. It was straight out of science fiction.


I only got to see the tail end of the shuttle launches (too young) but I imagine watching the first launch/landing felt something like I experienced watching those two boosters land together.


Can confirm.


> the dual landings from the first Falcon Heavy flight

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kyO-h59RO5g


The FH synchronised side booster landing was visually epic and is timeless, but nothing quite tops the distinct feeling of actually seeing a the first stage of an orbital-class rocket return to Earth in a non-mangled up state. This video helps to relive the goosebumps: https://youtu.be/brE21SBO2j8?si=EZ8y5vcRTmG3eU75


Short of the moon landings that I never got to experience, the dual landing (especially that first one!) is the coolest thing I’ve ever seen in space flight. Could watch again and again.


If you are a native English speaker it’s nearly trivial. What i’ve found is even ESL speakers who have basically perfect English are thrown off by this. I don’t know why.


>I don't know why

It's the th sounds. Very hard to teach your tongue how to casually produce them if your native language doesn't have them.


Some backstory: By chance whilst visiting Ho Chi Minh city, I tried to create a tongue twister for a Vietnamese girl who spoke perfect English. This one did it.

I hadn’t yet asked ChatGPT or any other LLM until now to break down why a very reproducible task (English essentially must be your native language to pronounce this correctly) is near-impossible to do in rapid succession for ESL speakers.

I used o1-preview. Afaik, this is a new tongue twister.


Doubt this is coordinated - more likely a singular (m/b)illionaire wanted a post/photo/video, or multiple of, deleted for good, perhaps for suppression of legal evidence, and this was one way of bringing some firepower to a… library. One of the internets biggest libraries too. Odd.


But a ddos doesn't remove the page...


it may prevent its capture in the first place, and it can also prevent consulting the page (a delay tactic)


Good points.


I fully trust apple photos / g photos, on an iphone.

Idk/idc about the "daily 0 days" that you referenced, I do care about being able to know with absolute certainty that my photos will be there 20 years from now.


That's perfectly fine. But if you don't care about privacy, why are you responding to a thread about privacy?


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