Trying to spread the idea that humans need to evolve beyond our current stage based on mutual exploitation and learn to again live on this planet sustainably and without coercion.

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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 21st, 2023

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  • Kool_Newt@lemm.eetoMemes@lemmy.mlBlockchain: the wave of the future
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    9 months ago

    IMO, blockchain technology is good for one use case: illegal transactions.

    YES!!!

    The only thing you’re not getting quite right is what it means to be “illegal” and whether the groups making this decision have anyone’s interest in mind except their own.

    When doing right is or becomes illegal because our country is run by a fascist, that “illegal” money will save lives.


  • Kool_Newt@lemm.eetoMemes@lemmy.mlBlockchain: the wave of the future
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    9 months ago

    Imagine if you will… the dollar (cash) was invented today, up until now all there was was long-established crypto currency.

    Suddenly there’s all sorts of scams where crooks trick people out of their dollars. Others are getting straight robbed and have no recourse to get their cash back. Cops often don’t believe you as you have little evidence of the $1000 you just had. Yet others are getting scammed by “banks” that disappear soon after accepting deposits as there is no state regulation.

    What you’re seeing is not a problem inherent in crypto-currency or blockchains, it’s a new tool. Many new tools are used most effectively by “the bad guys” first. Even look at Mp3s, the first 5 years of their existence their purpose was basically to rob record companies. Are mp3s a scam?

    Don’t let banks and authorities convince you that one of the most effective weapons against them is a scam against you. You don’t think the banks are telling you the truth… this time… right?





  • Kool_Newt@lemm.eetoMemes@lemmy.mlBlockchain: the wave of the future
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    9 months ago

    Consensus algorithms lie at the foundation for a great many of the backend systems our internet depends on, massive scaling would be a near impossibility without them. – me, a 25 year backed engineer

    It makes absolute sense that a massively scalable trustless system involving money would use a consensus algorithm with a large number of nodes.



  • Just throwing some thoughts out there

    • fdisk shows /dev/sdc1 and mount doesn’t see it – did you perhaps unplug it and replug it causing potential renumeration?

    • Use the dmesg command to watch Linux detect the device

    • Use cat /proc/partitions to see the kernels view of storage devices

    • Check out the /dev/disk/by-label, /dev/disk/by-uuid, /dev/disk/by-partlabel etc and see how the point to each other

    e.g.

    $ ls -l /dev/disk/by-partlabel/arch-root lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 10 Jan 25 19:46 /dev/disk/by-partlabel/arch-root -> ../../sda2