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President Biden vetoes crypto custody bill
  • This sounds good to me. To my understanding, banks in the US do not actually have to hold any money in reserve for it's customers as of... 2020?

    Hey I found the FED posting! https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/reservereq.htm

    This is my favorite part "As announced on March 15, 2020, the Board reduced reserve requirement ratios to zero percent effective March 26, 2020. This action eliminated reserve requirements for all depository institutions."

    Happy Halloween kids. 😈

  • The Internet Archive is under a DDoS attack
  • Damn. I guess this is why we can't have nice things.

    I guess I'll take this opportunity mention if one cannot make a monetary donation to IA. You can always help them out by help seed some of their torrents. I'd appreciate it at least :P

  • Linux Inventor Says He Doesn’t Believe in Crypto
  • Oh I'm trying to suggest that like many technologies. The infancy of it is laced with people who are scamming others. Medicine had a go about with this phase as well; and to my understanding is now widely regarded as a "good move". Even if some dude use to sell cocaine mixed with alcohol and called it medicine because it made you feel better.

  • Linux Inventor Says He Doesn’t Believe in Crypto
  • That may be true. To me, however, not all regulation are ethically or morally sound. I hear people in countries with corrupt governments can use these new fangled monies to avoid the regulations/sanctions put on their countries.

    The example that comes to my mind was some guy in Turkey buying medicine. I guess Turkey isn't allowed to trade many countries because they government is corrupt? And this person was unable to get the medicine they needed in Turkey. Only way was to in port I guess? So they converted their local turkish currency to something the medicine maker would accept.

    I can't really verify such claims but seemed like an alright "breaking of the rules".

  • Linux Inventor Says He Doesn’t Believe in Crypto
  • Now a days we peer review medicine. As I mentioned, in the "wild west". There's no peer reviewing. The metaphor of the wild west was also pointing out the infancy of a technology. Another example could be how the "self driving cars" aren't actually that self driving. However I suspect that over time even those cars will actually become peer reviewed, functional and what not.

    The example that I saw that I liked the best was video games. Just because someone sells bad video games. Doesn't mean all video games are a scam. Ya, know?

  • Linux Inventor Says He Doesn’t Believe in Crypto
  • For clarification. To my understanding, the older cryptographic currencies use an immense amount of power (Proof of Work). But newer models have solved that issue by switching to a Proof of Stake model instead.

  • Linux Inventor Says He Doesn’t Believe in Crypto
  • When the Wild West was around Medicine was used as a scam too. Snake Oil salesmen aren't very nice people. But that doesn't mean medicine is a bad idea ya know?

    I agree that there are a lot of snake oil sellers in the cryptographic currencies realm. But that world is basically the digital wild west at the moment to me. I too am waiting to see what happens.

  • Linux Inventor Says He Doesn’t Believe in Crypto
  • Also consider that many peoples (me) would like to move from the older cryptocurrencies that needs lots of power to run (proof of work) and try to advocate for newer proof of stake models.

    To my understanding proof of stake models have dramatically lower power requirements.

  • InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)TA
    Tachikoma741 @lemmy.today
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