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Comment Re:Crazy Idea (Score 2) 38

You technically don't trust them to secure your passwords. Each user encrypts there own set of passwords with an AES-256 master password. It's right in the summary.

Yes you do, they write the software and the whole stack that manages your password. The fact that encryption is used at one point in the stack doesn't change the fact you are trusting that all the other components from the app, to the storage are done properly and secure.

Comment It frequently means you can't revisit games (Score 1) 163

One of the side effects is you can't revisit games. Played dead by daylight pretty hard and got to rank 1. Took a year break and came back to the game and just get stomped over and over, sometimes going a whole match and getting 1 hook. One of the side affects of MMR match making is how it degrades or adjusts when you take a break. I'm not gonna play for a couple of weeks getting stomped and people high MMR asking if i'm new to the game over and over just to be able to enjoy the game again.
Beer

Does Evolution Want Us To Drink? (wsj.com) 184

Alcohol is terrible for the human body, yet we've developed a strong taste for it, suggesting that it may bring other kinds of benefits. From a report: Alcoholic intoxication is an abnormal mental state characterized by reduced self-control and various degrees of euphoria or depression, brought about by the temporary impairment of a pretty big chunk of the brain. As the term suggests, it involves the ingestion of a chemical toxin, ethanol, which in small doses makes us happy, more sociable and better at thinking creatively and defusing conflicts. In progressively higher doses, it can lead to degraded motor coordination, slurred speech, violent arguments, maudlin expressions of love, inappropriate touching, injuries, blackouts, property damage and even karaoke. Why do we do it? Historically, scientists have written off our affinity for intoxication as an evolutionary mistake, a method that we've developed for tricking our biological reward system into releasing little shots of pleasure for no good reason. But this is not a satisfying explanation. It should puzzle us more than it does that humans have devoted so much ingenuity and effort to getting drunk.

[...] If alcohol were merely hijacking pleasure centers in the brain, evolution should have figured it out by now and put a firm end to this nonsense. Other vices can plausibly be seen as necessary appetites gone wrong, such as our taste for pornography or junk food. But alcohol is mind-bogglingly dangerous, both physiologically and socially. The fact that our supposedly accidental taste for it has not been eradicated by genetic or cultural evolution means that the cost of indulging in alcohol must be offset by benefits. Evidence from archaeology, history, cognitive neuroscience, psychopharmacology, social psychology, literature and genetics suggests what some of these benefits might be. For instance, the ancient and cross-cultural view of alcohol as a muse is supported by modern psychology: Our ability to think outside the box is enhanced by one or two drinks. This is why artists, poets and writers have long turned to drink. The name of the Anglo-Saxon god of artistic inspiration, Kvasir, literally means "strong ale." This is also why some modern companies that rely upon innovation, like Google, judiciously mix work with alcohol -- by, for instance, providing whiskey rooms where frustrated coders can relax and expand their minds when struggling with a challenging problem.

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