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Zerush, (edited ) in Enjoy your Call of Duty
@Zerush@lemmy.ml avatar

I love The Dark Mod, it shows what it means to make a good Game, above it’s OpenSource and a game for years.

Official Trailer yewtu.be/watch?v=brJqHnXmpgE

ComaScript, in Poverty isn't a flaw its a feature.

I wonder why communist China has so many homeless if homelessness is a feature of capitalism

Grayox,
@Grayox@lemmy.ml avatar

Got any sources on Chinese homeless populations compared to American homeless populations?

Cowbee, in If only dreams came true

It would be even nicer if Conservatives stopped being Conservatives. The Overton Window needs to be moved way more to the left.

Diva, (edited )
@Diva@lemmy.ml avatar

Stop conservatives from being conservative with one weird trick!

spoiler(explicit call for violence)

ComaScript,

As a foreigner sometimes I wonder who’s really the fascist…

Diva,
@Diva@lemmy.ml avatar

Guess what, political violence goes both ways, the best place for a fascist is in the ground.

1847953620,

or in a bbq grill

Daft_ish, in If only dreams came true

ITT: people dealing with a fascist the way it should be done. We are ready for a time machine, let’s go back to 2016.

1847953620,

Gotta go pick up the .50 bmg

Taleya, (edited ) in Vegan food: The west vs India

One of these cultures has normalised vegan and vegetarianism for centuries, the other is trying to wean a meat-obsessed population.

They are not the same thing, nor do they have the same requirements to reach their end goals

seitanic,
@seitanic@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

How prevalent is veganism in India? Whenever I look at Indian food, it’s butter this and milk that. Sure, there are some very good vegan choices, but it seems to me that Indians love their dairy.

lobut,

Yeah I have a lot of vegetarian Indian friends, not as many vegan.

TheCaconym,

9% of the population apparently, the highest in the world tied with Mexico.

Taleya,

Veganism is actually a fairly new phenomenon in general, a lot of Jains in particular have adopted it. But vegetarianism in India dates back over a thousand years BCE , so yeah, they’ve got a bit of a head start.

portside,

Vegetarian? Yes. Vegan? No.

I am a vegetarian. I eat dairy. I don’t eat meat and eggs.

HawlSera,

Just eat eggs bro it’s just a chicken period

Rolive,

Somehow doesn’t sound as tasty.

Misconduct,

Except for the part where they’re kept in small cages or “free range” in dirty cramped pens. Luckily it’s easier to get eggs from chickens raised ethically than meats. You just gotta fork over a few extra bucks or get the hookup at a farmer’s market

AA5B,

Effing dinosaurs, with 6,000 years of eating cave men, deserve all the incarceration they get. /s

More seriously, depending on your priorities, factory farmed chicken is less bad for the overall environment than pretty much any beef

HawlSera,

Chickens are not people

Misconduct,

I never said they were? I’m not even a vegetarian stop being so sensitive. I don’t care for making anything suffer when I can still have eggs without the suffering. It’s that simple. If you’ve based too much of your personality on macho meathead bullshit then do you boo. I’m sure that’s a great replacement for an actual personality.

jose1324,

Based response

pascal,

Savage but fair.

Rozauhtuno,
@Rozauhtuno@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

To a vegan, that doesn’t matter because it’d be speciesism.

HawlSera,

Yeah, Vitamin B12 defiencies make you act erratic

abraxas,

or “free range” in dirty cramped pens.

We drive 10mph around here because the damn chickens like to “free range” in the road. Those are pretty large pens, the size of a damn town.

The USDA needs to get their pockets out of big ag’s hands. Free Range should be Free-Fucking-Range. I get to know the chicken I eat got to run wild 16 hours every day, but many people do not.

Misconduct,

Yeah the fuckery that they pull when they list things as grass fed and free range is vile. Then they make a profit on top of it because they barely change anything but charge premium prices for the fancy label.

I’m lucky to have a beef farm in my state that ships locally and actually follows the spirit of grass fed up to grass finished in sprawling pastures. They also do individual slaughter. For eggs we’ve got a few locals that bring them to the farmers markets on Sundays. Beef is like a once a week thing for us these days and it’s usually just ground beef. Chicken and fish are our biggest sources of protein now. I don’t really do pork anymore. Can’t find any that’s remotely close to ethically sourced which is abysmal considering how intelligent pigs are. So I just stopped buying it.

Also, and I’m fully aware this could just be some kinda subconscious bias, but I swear the meat and eggs taste SO much better than the stuff from the grocery. Eggs especially. The yolks are so vibrant and hardly break when being fried. Even the shells seem stronger and less likely to shatter into tiny annoying bits.

abraxas, (edited )

Here’s my reason for trying to eat a little more beef than that. If I’m giving “lives lost” any value, you can’t beat cows for calories per animal death. It beats a lot of plant-based foods. And I do have local beef, though it is not fully sustained like local chicken is… which is why I eat more chicken and seafood as well. Not to mention, even though beef around me can be ecologically sustainable, it will not remain that way if too many people eat it because it needs to be supplemented by import. So some beef = good. More beef = less good.

We actually have some ethically sourced local pork, too. I guess it’s nice living in a farming area of my state, despite not living in a farming-state. The butcher’s pork section is always small, but he’s got some.

Also, and I’m fully aware this could just be some kinda subconscious bias, but I swear the meat and eggs taste SO much better than the stuff from the grocery

Not really a subconscious bias. They are fresher, and preservation techniques often have not been started on them. If you eat an egg that has never been refrigerated, of course it’s fresher. (or the opposite, lol)

The seafood my family fishes is right off a boat, generally only a couple hours harvested. After the fishermens’ cut, the best stuff goes to a couple local restaurants and seafood markets, and the rest are frozen and shipped. Yes, you can taste the difference. I never liked scallops until I tasted “the real thing” off a boat.

hiddengoat,

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vegetarianism_by_country

About 30% are vegetarian in India. Almost 10% are vegan.

So it's very prevalent, but America likes to pretend we're the only country in the world and that problems are never solved anywhere else.

MenacingPerson,

Where are the Indian vegans? I have only ever met ONE in my entire life except myself.

hiddengoat,

Try India.

MenacingPerson,

Maybe it’s a regional difference? I live in South India

NewAgeOldPerson,

Lol I actually laughed. Maybe it’s the beer. But thanks!

alienzx,

Hi 👋

Source: me

MenacingPerson,

Hi!

I don’t mean like, online. I’ve met plenty of online Indian vegans. But still, I find it hard to believe that every 1 in 10 people are vegan. Where?!

abraxas,

I would say about 30% of my Indian coworkers over the years have been vegan.

I think the challenge is that, unlike a lot of Western vegans, they don’t go out of their way to talk about it. My second job, I knew day 1 about the white girl who was vegan. It took me 2 years to learn that 4 of my Indian coworkers were vegan since birth. And I only learned it because they learned I was getting into Indian food so they all started bringing stuff in for me to try. Entire meals. Incredible meals. I miss that job, lol.

MenacingPerson,

My family loves to announce to the world that I don’t drink milk. It’s annoying. Idk they’re probably in shock or something that someone would choose not to abuse cows. (They’re vegetarians, I’m vegan)

Where do you live? I assume outside India? Hmm

federatingIsTooHard,
@federatingIsTooHard@lemmy.world avatar

no one abuses cows anyway

MenacingPerson,

Tell me you know nothing about it without telling me you know nothing about it

federatingIsTooHard,
@federatingIsTooHard@lemmy.world avatar

I know enough to tell you you’re spreading misinformation

MenacingPerson,

I’m not going to bother. I’m tired.

federatingIsTooHard,
@federatingIsTooHard@lemmy.world avatar

have a nice day

abraxas,

Well yeah, very outside of India. I live in the US, though I try not to make my identity about that.

But one thing I’ve loved about working in Boston is how many cultures I’ve been exposed to in my life.

portside,

Exactly, we don’t go about our day preaching veganism.

NuPNuA,

It’s not vegan so much as veggie. They definitely respect those cows they get the milk from though.

sviper,

Quite popular, in my city it’s quite hard to find meat in the popular restaurants. And these places are quite old and we’ll know.

Most foods don’t have any form or trace of meat or eggs, although milk and related items are very widely consumed.

It’s vegetarian and not vegan.

muddi,

Hence this meme

Taleya,

which would be fine if it were just a straight comparison but it starts bleating about chemicals and preservatives and it’s a bit too purity politicking for my tastes.

NuPNuA,

This is what people don’t get, if you’ve been veggie for years then you don’t need meat substitutes, these products are for normies trying to cut back or give up while they break the cultural training.

wren,
@wren@sopuli.xyz avatar

I’ve been vegetarian for… more than a decade? I love meat substitutes and generally prefer having the substitute present in meals (either as the main thing, like a burger, or as an inclusion). I do agree that meat substitutes are a fantastic way of reducing meat consumption for meat-eaters, but that doesn’t mean you need to do away with it completely once you’re in ‘full veg’ mode

AA5B,

Maybe. While I do sometime choose the plant-based meat, thinking of it as a substitute was my initial reluctance to try vegetarian food. Back then, I ridiculed the idea of a “veggie burger”, but really liked grilling a “black bean patty”. Did you realize Mac and Cheese can be vegetarian? “Greek veggie dip” is horrible, but I love hummus. I always loved various potatoes, but it was quite a revelation that you could spice them up and use them as a meal. My latest infatuation is Halloumi or Paneer - don’t ever call a nice grilling cheese a substitute for anything.

At least for me, it is easier to choose foods for their own value, rather than suffer with a substitute, r a variation “without”. I’m not a vegetarian and have no interest in it, but I will choose what looks good to me at any given time, on its own merits

SpookyGenderCommunist,
@SpookyGenderCommunist@hexbear.net avatar

One of these cultures has normalised vegan and vegetarianism for centuries, the other is trying to wean a meat-obsessed population

As someone who works in a grocery store, the worst fucking people are the ones who go up to the deli counter and yell at the clerks, demanding the "bloodiest* roast beef they’ve got. That or the spiciest turkey, or whatever.

Dudes who’s entire sense of self is invested in eating meat. Easily the most annoying kind of guy I encounter in my daily life.

Taleya,

That and the ‘for every animal you don’t eat i’m gonna eat THREE!’ Yay well done so macho you get threatened by what another person eats fucking yay for you sir gold star.

abraxas,

Dudes who’s entire sense of self is invested in eating meat

This might sound silly. But maybe they enjoy the taste of rare roast beef? Before this “make meat seem like it’s not dead animal” trend, the rule used to be anything over medium was overcooked for most meats. For some odd reason (actually, not odd. freaking additives) a lot of roast beef is sold medium-well. Which is tasteless enough to make someone go vegan!

I don’t understand “yell at the clerks”. I’ve never seen that. But I agree it’s rude. Just **not **because they are buying meat.

bighatchester, in Enjoy your Call of Duty

Spider-man 2 used like 100gb but at least you could fast travel with no load screens due to the ps5 SSD

abfarid,
@abfarid@startrek.website avatar

100GBs is more or less acceptable for a flagship open-world game on a 4K-capable console.

Selmafudd, in I value this meme at eleventy billion and won't take a cent less

It’s not even the picture, it’s the promise you own a picture

BolexForSoup, (edited )
@BolexForSoup@kbin.social avatar

Imagine waving the receipt of your brand new TV you don’t have in your home around in public for prestige

refurbishedrefurbisher, (edited )

It’s more like you have a receipt for a link of where to get the manual for the TV.

Hildegarde,

Holding an NFT can give you ownership of an image. If you have a bored ape NFT you own some legal rights to the image.

That’s because of contract law, and IP law. A contract assigns the copyright to the holder of the NFT, and governments enforce legal contracts.

The only thing that gives NFTs any claim to value is the fact that a centralized authority can enforce it. The entire concept behind the decentralized leaderless authority of the blockchain is a myth.

workerONE, (edited )

Yeah you can own an NFT but you can own any image through a license agreement with the owner.

Hildegarde,

Yes… That’s the point of my comment.

BolexForSoup, (edited )
@BolexForSoup@kbin.social avatar

“You own the image“ functionally doesn’t mean anything in the context of NFT’s because the image component in an NFT is not actually exchanging hands so there’s nothing to truly enforce here. It doesn’t grant exclusive rights and all that comes with it, it just gives them ownership rights - an artist can’t say the owner can’t use it for their own purposes. People can screenshot it, make memes of that, etc. and you have no legal recourse because you do not have exclusive rights to the actual work. They did nothing that violates your ownership. The NFT is you have a receipt that nobody can dispute that says “I own this receipt associated with this image and can use it as such.”

When I shoot video and give people a screener, I watermark it and have legal rights to the image/video content itself. They cannot duplicate it or use it in any fashion without risking legal action by me against them. NFT’s do not have that same protection. I can screenshot a bored ape image that someone “owns,” barely augment it, and mint a new NFT with no repercussions from the person who bought the original NFT. The original artist could come after me potentially because they have the actual exclusive rights to the creation, which again does not transfer with an NFT purchase.

In addition, you don’t even own the means to protect the receipt. If the blockchain goes down, your receipt is meaningless and you don’t even have exclusive rights to the image to sell or license out.

To give one more example: if I buy a video game, I have certain ownership rights associated with that disk. This is assuming physical copies of course. I can do whatever I want with that physical copy within the bounds of ownership of a distributed IP. I can snap it in half, I can back it up to a drive, etc. What I cannot do is make copies and distribute it because I have no rights to the IP, it has not been transferred to me with the purchase. The developer/publisher still has exclusivity, they control the IP. And if somebody else makes copies of my gave to be distributed, I have no legal recourse. This is really the key factor here. That law they’re breaking is not about my ownership, it’s about the game developer and publisher’s rights to the IP. They are the only ones who have legal recourse. NFTs, it’s the same way. The artist has all of the legal protections that come with IP ownership. Not the person who bought an NFT of the artwork.

TL;DR: NFT’s are buying receipts. They’re roughly as useful as “a certificate of authenticity“ they comes bundled with collectors items that were sold on infomercials in the 90s and 2000s. Except you don’t even get to store the certificate yourself, you’re dependent on somebody else

superduperenigma,

And the picture itself is just a randomly generated picture of a money or a picture of Donald Trump photoshopped into something from the first page of Google images.

AI_toothbrush, in Communist Filth/Capitalist Filth

I have no problem with communism(i think socdem is a better system but thats a discussion for another day) but the moment a tankie here mentions anything about the soviet union being better than capitalism just look up holodomor.

Sagar, in Communist Filth/Capitalist Filth

Now that is what I call a truely amazing meme for showing the amazing capitalism abilities!

cryptix, in Communist Filth/Capitalist Filth

Build more spikes

TAYRN, in The panzer has spoken

…I mean, yeah? If the number is 50 or 10 that works out great. But let’s try that with 7% of 13. Now it’s 13% of 7. Just like you said, “much easier to calculate.”

Okay, choosing prime numbers was intentionally mean on my part. But 3% of 9 becomes 9% of 3. 4% of 2 becomes 2% of 4. Can anyone honestly look me in the eye and tell me that this tip has helped them out in any meaningful way?

Goun,

Wait are you questioning the wisdom of panzer of the lake?!

Ravi,

x% × y = x × y ÷ 100 This helps you out much more.

plague_sapiens, (edited )
@plague_sapiens@lemmy.world avatar

Its easier:

10% of a 100: 100 * 0,1 = 10

2,5% of 33: 33 * 0,025 = 30 * 0,025 + 3 * 0,025 = 0,75 + 0,075 = 0,825

Thats how I calculate it mostly in my brain. But being smart I usually just type everything (like 9*9) in the calculator xD

BeardedGingerWonder,

I’d find 9% of 3 easier for sure. Sometimes it’s easier sometimes it’s not. Just use it when it’s easier.

jasondj, (edited )

9% of 3 is easier to estimate because you know it’s “almost 10% of 3”. Or, since 10-1==9, you could think of it as (10% of 3)-(1% of 3) and get the right answer using some other shortcuts. Humans being generally pretty good at base10, this is easy to figure out in your head as (0.3 - 0.03) and get 0.27.

Or, you could do what another commenter suggested and “3% of 9” can broken down as (3/100)•(9/1), becomes, (3•9) / (100•1), becomes 27/100, becomes 0.27. And that can be simplified as xy/100.

Different tools for different jobs. Base10 tricks are good for stuff like figuring out, say, a 15% or 20% tip, because you can easily figure out a 10% tip just by moving the decimal one space to the left, and add half of that (for 15) or double it (for 20). Or half and half again for (almost) 18%. xy/100 is a good trick for figuring out small percentages like sales tax (unless you’re in a place like Mass where it’s 6.25 and you gotta change it now to 625y/10000. At that point I’d just estimate at 6 in my head, or if I had to solve it mentally do (6y100) + ((1y100)/4).

Imgonnatrythis,

This tip helped me 21%

Moops,

So you might even say, “21% of you helped the tip”?

someguy3,

21% of 100%?

Imgonnatrythis,

No. 100% of 21%

1847953620,

Yes, idiot. Choosing instances of when it’s less helpful (arguably) doesn’t negate the cases where it is deemed very helpful.

Tikiporch,

Well, single digit percentages are easy. If it helps, move your decimal to the right so 9% becomes 90%. You can probably calculate 90% of 3 because you can do 10% and subtract it and get 2.7. Now move your decimal back to the left and you get 9% of 3 which is 0.27. You can do the same with higher percentages once you learn to break them in to 10% pieces.

Bransons404, (edited )

I’d… probably use the calculator app before I do all this mental gymnastics

Mr_Dr_Oink, (edited )

This is not mental gymnastics.

This is a coherent method and makes a lot of sense.

Mental gymnastics is when someone has to lie to themselves to make a point that isn’t correct. Like when people argue that trump was a good president because they can list several good things he did.

Or when people claim something is mental gymnastics when it’s actually called maths.

hydroptic,

You’re really asking whether commutativity of multiplication has ever helped anyone? Because that’s what this is.

And yes it has helped me eg. estimate things or whatever along the years – but of course it’s not going to be some sort of magical mathematics trick where just by reversing the numbers it’ll always make things easier to calculate in your head

TAYRN, (edited )

No, I think we all learned that multiplication is commutative in late elementary school, and obviously that’s an important thing to know.

But I think the original post tried to make it out to be some magical mathematical trick, and I really don’t understand that. Maybe I misunderstood the post.

Edit: wow, “commutative” is a really hard word to spell.

hydroptic,

Yeah I think this is more about how you interpreted it, because it doesn’t look like others took it as being an absolute magic trick rule and neither did I.

The Panzer of the Lake didn’t use the word “commutativity” (fuck that really is hard to spell), but it gave out some wisdom that applied that rule by saying that “percentages are reversible”: if the reverse of a percentage would be easier to calculate, you can use it and get the same answer. If it’s not easier, well, then you’re screwed 😁 Oooooor depending on the situation you can use the a × b% = a × b / 100 commutativity trick:

7 × 8% = 0.56

7 × 8 / 100 = 0.56

TAYRN,

Oh, that is actually much more helpful. So, if you know your times tables, you can do percentages. You just have to use communitavatization.

Jokes aside, I really appreciate it. That made it much more easier to understand. Thank you.

hydroptic,

You’re welcome! Glad I could give you an a-ha moment.

Having an intuitive feel for tricks like using the definition of operators or symbols to make your life (well, calculations at least) easier usually means that you either have to just be “naturally” talented at math which is really rare, or you’ve just had to grind grind grind math at eg. university, work or whatever. So unless someone was taught that above trick and they actually remember it from school, they might never come to think that “hmm % just means / 100 so that can make this easier to figure out in my head”.

drew_belloc, in The panzer has spoken
@drew_belloc@programming.dev avatar

Same energy as multiplication with 9, just take 1 from the right side and put it on the left

(09, 18, 27, 36, 45)

bobzilla,

Instructions unclear…

09, 108, 1107, 11106, 111105

gusVLZ,

Found the JavaScript developer

drew_belloc,
@drew_belloc@programming.dev avatar

Keep doing this until you get a binary number and then your pc can do the rest for you

GBU_28, (edited )

You can multiply by 9 on your fingers.

Hold hands out, fingers splayed, thumbs towards each other. 🙌

9*2 put your left ring finger down (the 2nd finger). Left of that is tens place, right of that is the ones place.

So 1 on the left, 8 on the right of the downed finger.

9*5 put the left thumb down (5th finger.) 4, 5. 45.

n0m4n,

The trick that I teach the shorter humanoids is to subtract 1 from the multiplier of 9, put that number in the 10s column, then complete the nine and put that in the 1s column.

Then we spent some time finding the pairs of numbers that make 9. 1+8. 2+7, 3+…7+2, 8+1. I have to be explicit in this part, or they will shortcut to 3, (use fingers to count to 9) uh 6? They usually learn it in a day or two. To get them to flash to instantly know their times tables takes longer.

RobertOwnageJunior,

Instructions unclear, thumb stuck in asshole.

GBU_28,

That’s numberwang

drew_belloc,
@drew_belloc@programming.dev avatar

Thank god i wasn’t the only one

heydo,

4 5 therefore 9

9 and 9 therefore 18

18 and 18 therefore 36

4 5 therefore 9

SaltyIceteaMaker, in I value this meme at eleventy billion and won't take a cent less

I think NFT’s had some promise for stuff you actually have to own (not some ape pictures). Like a digital version for maybe an invitation or tickets or if done properly (by your countries government for example) maybe even for stuff like licenses (i.e. driving license, welding license etc.) Or identification (passport, id, etc.)

Hildegarde,

Every single one of the examples you gave relies on some single centralized authority to give it value. Passports and licences are meaningless without a government. Tickets rely on the venue.

I have not heard anyone mention any application for NFTs that would work better than a database run by the agency that is required to give the document value.

Blockchain is a solution in search of a problem.

UPGRAYEDD, (edited )

The problem IS the centralized authority. Can you forever trust a government to not artificially inflate or deflate the value of a currency? The whole point was to have a system with no single authority. No single point of failure.

It is, however, not perfect. The volatility, limited number of transacrions per second , and reliance on an incredible amount of energy expense were the largest of these when the original bitcoin concept was created. Some of these issues have solutions, but its still an evolving technology.

rbn,

For government documents you need nothing but a plain old certificate to create a digital signature. If there is a single instance of trust (such as a government) there absolutely no point in using a blockchain.

Decentral NFTs for concert tickets would only make sense if you were looking for a solution to liberate the second market, i.e. people selling tickets to other people without involvement of the host of the concert. Such a model is neither beneficial for the hosts (as they wouldn’t benefit from the second market sales) nor the visitors (as the second market typically leads to even higher prices). If you meant a way to return/trade tickets on a platform controlled by the host / the original issuer of the tickets, then there’s again no need at all for crypto aside plain old, stupid certificates.

makeasnek, (edited )
@makeasnek@lemmy.ml avatar

Even in single instances of trust there can be advantages to using blockchain for those applications:

  • Decentralization can give you better uptime/availability of those documents. If the DMVs website or authentication service goes down, documents can still be authenticated since they and/or their signatures stored in a distributed manner. The internet can go down at your bar but if you have a recent copy of a chain, you can still verify somebody’s ID.
  • It can make them easier to transfer between parties, and creates a digital “paper trail” which can conform to whatever requirements one might have. For example, you could easily require several parties to sign off any time the document is moved or assigned to a new person.
  • You can use those documents and their signatures with smart contracts or other decentralized apps. For example, you could sign up for an account at a bank or a platform like eBay using your NFT’d digital ID and the bank could accept it would needing to manually verify if the id “looks fake” or if your blurry phone picture is going to cut it. They don’t have to call up the government and ask them to verify it or pay some third party to match your address against their database of known people, etc.
  • Maybe you need better transparency in how many documents are issued and (potentially) to whom. Voting systems, for example, are a use case for this. It could be used for shareholder governance structures, etc.
  • Blockchains can enforce rules which centralized entities can’t, which is important to consider. An example of how this is useful: imagine the government has a digital ID system and it’s run in a centralized fashion, which makes sense, because they are the issuing authority right? Now imagine that centralized system gets hacked and an attacker starts printing and authenticating a bunch of fake ID requests. In the time between when this attack happens and when somebody figures it out, which could be hours to days, banks and other entities could be relying on those fake documents and potentially lose millions. An example of a rule a blockchain can enforce is “this ID issuing authority cannot issue in a single day more than 10% above it’s daily average of issuances over a six month period”, limiting the scope of an attack. One may say “Well, but blockchain can be hacked too!” which is true, but it’s less likely because the software for these networks has thousands of eyes on it whereas there may only be a couple system admins approving changes to your state-run ID database. Open source software is more secure than proprietary for this reason. Additionally, a security flaw needs to effect 51% of the network which isn’t likely to happen when you have a diversity of software versions.
  • Many smart contracts need ways to protect against sybil attacks (ie one person pretending to be multiple). Quadratic funding being used for charity fundraising is a perfect example. By using credentials issued on chain by centralized authorities, they can verify a person is not multiple people. Quadratic funding is an awesome way to fund public goods.
conorab,

The downtime issue for identities is already solved with a government certificate and distributed certificate revocation list. As long as multiple independent parties are mirroring the government’s list, taking down the government servers would not affect identity verification. Certificate Transparency solves the CA compromise problem since you have a log of all issued certs.

ElectricCattleman,

There are some fringe benefits for blockchain but massive issues with normal human issues like:

  • Scams/theft: person has the wallet lost through scam or left, how do you invalidate the lost credentials or tickets.
  • Wallet loss: loss through any number of means: fire, incompetence, computer being destroyed, loss of account to cloud backup etc
  • Issuer need to invalidate: if tickets/credentials were purchased by fraud or an issue occurs where they need to invalidate

How does blockchain handle these common situations?

Zuberi,
@Zuberi@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

The government would obviously be in charge of the blockchain in a very strong way. You would do the exact same process you would to replace a stolen license.

makeasnek, (edited )
@makeasnek@lemmy.ml avatar

Scams/theft: person has the wallet lost through scam or left, how do you invalidate the lost credentials or tickets.

In these examples, we are talking about credentials issued by a central authority. That authority can re-issue new credentials and invalidate old ones. Easy peasy.

If we’re talking about the risk that people have their crypto stolen in general, yes it does carry that risk same as cash. There are several strategies to mitigate this: people can park larger amounts at institutions if they want or they can use things like multi-sig wallets. You have one smaller pot of money which is your everyday spending wallet which you (or somebody who gains access to it) can spend from whenever you want, and one which is “multi-sig” meaning at least one of your trusted friends/family members/etc also has to sign off if money moves out of that account. You can have multiple people on the multi-sig wallet and set the rules for example 2 of 5 friends or what have you. You wouldn’t leave $10,000 in your phone’s mobile wallet just like you wouldn’t carry a briefcase with $10,000 in cash on the subway. Small money in your spending wallet, big money in your multi-sig.

This is similar to how one stores money normally. You have some cash in your wallet and you put the rest in a bank. In order to withdraw significant money from your bank account, the bank is going to undertake some kind of investigation to make sure it’s actually you. This might be checking your ID at the teller for example. They might also include some type of fraud guarantees where they will cover any losses you experience. That kind of a system is not incompatible with blockchain and I expect with time industries will appear to mitigate these kinds of risks from an insurance perspective.

Also, generally speaking, no system is going to completely eliminate theft and fraud. 99% of the fraud and theft committed over human history has been done using traditional currency, including the kinds of fraud that aren’t even called fraud because the “right people” are doing them like bank bailouts or market manipulation. Even highly-credentialed systems like Paypal are rife with fraud, ask any ebay seller. So we can’t expect crypto or any other technology to eliminate it either, there will always be some. The best we can do is try to find technological, social, and educational methods for reducing it.

Wallet loss: loss through any number of means: fire, incompetence, computer being destroyed, loss of account to cloud backup etc

Same risks as cash, multi-sig or institutional holdings as explained above can solve this.

Issuer need to invalidate: if tickets/credentials were purchased by fraud or an issue occurs where they need to invalidate

Same as answer 1

BroBot9000, in Can you describe Lemmy in one picture?
@BroBot9000@lemmy.world avatar

Is that famous actress Margot Robbean?

hperrin,

Is she the one who starred in Barbean?

Siegfried,

The barbarian?

eestileib, in I'm too high for this

That’s an ordinary braid.

I could explain how you’d French braid meat but I don’t think anybody here wants that.

hedgehogging_the_bed,

Shit, now I’m thinking about it and you’d need something big like a flank steak or a brisket. I don’t think a pork-loin would work since it’s not broad enough. You’d still need to probably butterfly it, and then fringe the edge so you had strands to work into the braid. Best I can think of would be more like braided filled pastry than anything else. Not a terrible sway to do a stuffed roast or roulade I guess.

Dirk,
@Dirk@lemmy.ml avatar

I don’t think anybody here wants that.

Talk for yourself!

Where is the French braiding meat OC?

Mr_Blott,

I too would like to see French braided flesh

CreateProblems,

So when you do a French braid in hair, you start off with three small sections. Every time you fold over the outer sections, you incorporate more hair into those sections. This differs from a normal braid, which doesn’t increase the size of the three parts of the braid as you go along.

French braiding flesh would require a lot more flesh. Also it wouldn’t look nearly as tidy because the other ends of the flesh (those not in the braid) are not attached to anything (i.e. a scalp) so it would be a loose tangled mess.

There’s easier ways to make something grotesque and cursed.

Dirk, (edited )
@Dirk@lemmy.ml avatar

Now I want to see it even more!

Deceptichum,
@Deceptichum@kbin.social avatar

You use beef tongue.

agentshags,
@agentshags@sh.itjust.works avatar

That’s for French kissing

Peppycito,

I prefer to sprang my meat.

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