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I would love to know if TCR has actually made a meaningful impact to stop spam.


Doubtful,it seems spammers just moved to toll free or moved to P2P routes.


TFNs require registration now too, as of sometime last year.


Bug bounties paid for by the users :(


Well, yes. If you're not willing to lose 100% of your investment to any security hole that may be discovered anywhere in the entire stack of software running on any machine from which you access your crypto account, you shouldn't invest in crypto.


Arguably, bug bounties are always paid for by users. A vendor might write the bounty-winner’s check, but the source of the vendor’s funds is the vendor’s customers.


'The users' vs 'A user'. The difference between everyone recognizing a 0.05% loss, and 20 people jumping off buildings every year.


FWIW, this thread originally linked to a tweet from a Nepalese-based person who found it in a Nepalese FB group, hence the confusion. No ill intent.



In the area of BCI, what is the most "Science-Fictiony" thing you have seen made into a reality?


I referenced this in my other reply, but this is one of the ones that blew my mind:

https://www.washington.edu/news/2019/07/01/play-a-video-game...


Congrats on hitting your goal! What's it like watching the number go up?


Never see so much money, haha. But this just a beginning. Next challenge is to produce it and deliver. Also I'm afraid of NFC goal, because this is a HUGE part of new code. But I will do my best to get this project done.


I like that the stretch for NFC is supposed to be high enough that it's off limits, but the pledges are rapidly making it look possible.


I believe in you guys! I know of this project through @Aquamine, she's a great artist!


The people involved in this are great, I don't have an interest in that kind of tech but I sent over a small amount.

Support people doing hackerspaces!


In the video stallman states that nonfree software is in the control of the developer who owns it, which is true, but isnt a developer of free software equally in control of their software? I dont look into the source of every program on my OS, even though if i was to use 100% free software, I could. This means I am equally depending on the developer of the free software not to be malicious as I am the nonfree software.


> This means I am equally depending on the developer of the free software not to be malicious as I am the nonfree software.

You're typically not the only person who is capable of looking at the code. If there are malicious features you can, in principle, go and see what they are and disable them. More likely, you can depend on others to do it, or you can even hire someone to do it for you. These options are not even available with non-free software.

There is a further purely psychological matter. People are more likely to behave nicely if they feel watched. If they are publishing the source code, they are less likely to be malicious, because they know that anyone can, in principle, inspect their malice. This results in fewer malicious features.

In the case of Firefox doing things like Pocket or Hello or whatever, people can and do go ahead and replace Firefox with things like GNU Icecat or Debian Iceweasel that can remove these unwanted features. Or Firefox extension authors can provide extensions to modify almost anything about Firefox, a task which is facilitated by having access to all of Firefox's source code.


They're not equally in control, as you can study, modify and redistribute the code. If you want to make your own version of the software, they can't stop you. So they're not equally in control.

You are relying on them to not be malicious, but you can also rely on anyone who wants to examine the code not to be fired or imprisoned for doing so. That's better than with proprietary software.


The point is that even if you personally didn't look over the source code, you'd be able to if you'd like to, and it's likely that people other than you have already looked at it.

This greatly reduces the opportunity for a developer or some other entity to introduce malicious code -- and even if that occurs, you reserve the right to remove it yourself and modify the programs you use as you see fit.


At least with free software there is the hope that malicious code will get picked up on by someone with an interest in reading the source, who would then make that functionality known to others.


To be fair, that hope exists with proprietary software as well, it's just that the end user is excluded from the set of eyes watching the code.


Not nearly as cool as OP's post, but I once created a 'game' with only CSS and HTML as well:

Street fighter rock paper scissors

http://codepen.io/Andygmb/full/EVbRqP/


That is ridiculous.

In a great way.


There's a trend of seemingly reinventing IRC and just putting it into the browser with a "hip" UI as of late.


By "reinventing IRC" you mean "making any kind of chat software"?


Making any kind of chat software without compelling improvements over IRC. Familiarity itself doesn't count.


Threaded replies does seem nice to have, but not nice enough that I'd be willing to give up on the other features of IRC.

One thing that'd be nice to have with IRC is if there were a cheap host somewhere that easily let people run their own weechat instance; too many of the people I talk with keep disconnecting because they don't have / can't be bothered with having their own server with a bouncer. (There's stuff like http://blinkenshell.org/wiki/Start but I was thinking something that one can recommend to complete newbies.)

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What else would be nice to have in IRC?


The interesting thing about IRC is that it can be modified to suit any individual's taste. But, that takes time and expertise. That guarantees IRC will stay within a niche audience of people technical enough to bend it to their will. What I'm liking about these new chat systems is it has some of the best features of IRC made available to all users with an interface they can understand and use.


Maybe not for you, but there's plenty of applications where ease-of-use and threaded conversations are a very big deal.


I wonder what other old 90's tech we can reinvent to make trendy again. Text based terminal RPGs? Warez groups? Demoscene?


LambdaMOO would be nice.


For a very good reason, mind you. IRC isn't for normal people. Nor does it support threaded conversations.


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