Comment Don't worry (Score 1) 167
These cryptocurrency payments can't be used to fund terror and evade sanctions since all the transactions are public on the blockchain! Also, would anyone like to buy a bridge?
These cryptocurrency payments can't be used to fund terror and evade sanctions since all the transactions are public on the blockchain! Also, would anyone like to buy a bridge?
Kalshi is only a thing because Draft Kings and Fan Duel have been so successful. Those two companies are as powerful as they are because New Jersey fought to strike down the federal law prohibiting the gambling on amateur sports in 2018 (Murphy v. National Collegiate Athletic Association).
Oh, how the wheel of 100% predictable consequences continues to turn...
"We're confident an unbiased court will overturn the original certification, and we look forward to the opportunity for our team to fairly voice their opinions."
Yes, a fair voicing of "opinions" on labor conditions between one human and one globe-spanning immortal megacorporation. Very fair.
and not great for those buying the companies products because those higher costs will be passed on to the customers in higher prices.
Only true for goods and services where there is perfectly inelastic demand, which kind of doesn't exist. Even demand for fuel is somewhat elastic. Health care has about the least elastic demand. Junk from Amazon has highly elastic demand.
But maybe Bezos and the other execs will take a pay cut to come up with more money for the warehouse workers and prices will not increase.
This would certainly happen to a large degree, otherwise Amazon could price themselves out of competitiveness fairly easily.
If you make your money by owning rather than by working, that's true. Higher wages reduce business owners' income, at least in the short term. So next time someone has that opinion, find out what they do for a living. They'll probably say they "run" something.
That would add the requirement for the central repository as infrastructure which is probably not worth it bandwidth/storage-wise when so many gaming PCs are likely to be online at any time, but the possibility of a malware vector (or some kind of sabotage, maybe people would try to DoS a game by sharing corrupted compiled shaders as a form of protest) is worth considering with or without it.
BOINC protects against errors or sabotage in their distributed computing system by having 2 random different users both run the same task and ensuring that the results from both match before accepting the result. This requires centralized infrastructure, but a duplicated work verification system like this could work. Imagine the centralized system acts as a trusted private torrent tracker, only verifying a shader and making it publicly accessible once multiple uploads match. That would make uploading invalid shaders almost impossible since a group would need to conspire to do it with exclusive earliest-possible access to the game/driver/hardware combo.
Those aren't reasons for everyone to be compiling on their own. In a BitTorrent-like system nobody would be "keeping" shaders they aren't using, just sharing shaders they've compiled because they're using them. If nobody's ever done it before for the hardware/driver combination then you fall back to compilation and then share your results so others can benefit and the same work doesn't have to be done again.
Plus most users are probably on one of the latest driver versions so there would be far more hardware than driver variation.
Just like how WaPo eventually went from an assurance that nothing would change to blocking an endorsement of Kamala Harris to no longer publishing any opinions that were insufficiently pro-"free market" for Bezos' taste:
On a related note I thought the idea of an IT staffer having time to play CoD at work was a laughably retro idea. In the post-pandemic era anyone who still has an IT job is being worked to the bone.
Yep, The Island and Altered Carbon (also an excellent TV series) were the first two works of sci-fi that came to mind, but Altered Carbon is a much closer match where the clones were brainless vs. The Island (if I say any more it'd be a major spoiler for sure, even mentioning that it contains the concept is a bit of a spoiler).
Probably humanoid robots, it's already happening in China:
While I strongly appreciate the elite's desire to highlight influence science fiction, I assert that cosplay is a sufficient means of doing so and directly acting the severely flawed actions of the villains from said stories benefits no one... not even themselves.
And wonder how long reddit will last when people start moving away cos of this.
People won't move away because bots get screened. They'll start moving away if the screening process shows too many false positives.
Their bigger risk is financial. If they're honest about getting rid of bots, traffic and subreddit participation will slow thereby resulting in reduced ad revenue and potential and valuation. If they're OK with that, then they'll do well. If, however, their shareholders press them to "increase ad revenue at all costs" then they'll loosen up bot restrictions, claim that the tech is advancing too much, and simply claim that all user accounts are humans for the sake of revenue generation.
A bunch of stock-trading bots and quick-fingered suits probably just flinched and dumped a couple hundred billion into ARM stock though. See also: the company formerly known as Long Island Iced Tea.
"Identity Verification" is being thrown around too much and it's getting people whipped up into a frenzy when they don't need to be. Identity Verification establishes actual human uniqueness by recording and validating Personally Identifying Information (PII) (government ID, birth information, biometric data, etc.).
When California passed a law requiring operating systems to make available the self-designation of the primary user's age group so websites and application programmers can query for that information and then NOT provide inappropriate content to minors, people lost their minds because it was called "Identity Verification". It is not.
The same goes here. From the CEO's own mouth in the video linked in the article:
Every platform wants to know, 'Is this a person?' Now, Reddit's version is 'Is this a person? But we don't want to know which person this is.' Because part of our promise for our users is we don't know your name, but do what to know that you're a person.
Is this not what we want? Fewer bots and NOT exposing my PII to companies unnecessarily?
Leveraging always beats prototyping.