>Use things incapable of complying with anything in the first place.
This is it.
>Use things incapable of complying with anything in the first place.
This is it.
@mister_monster @4rkal Agreed. Surprising for me, as well. I suppose for the git-stuff, the community is complacent with the fact that github still hasn't tried any shenanigans. Most of the issue tickets are opened there, and most of the code and protocol related discussions use github's infra. There is too much inertia to overcome to make the change from github to a git[dot]getmonero.org, for instance.
Regarding the forum: agreed. However, we still have monero.town that is positioned to become the forum-like discussion medium, which is independent of the reddit.
@HardenedSteel yeah.. basically proton is a honeypot:
>cannot use their tor hidden service for anonymous account creation
>cannot use the btc payment option during anonymous account creation
>no XMR payment option at all
I think Monero community can do better. Just create a version of cockli service that forces people to pay a buck a month in XMR. Promise to keep their emails encrypted in the server SSDs, or allow them to use POP to pull their emails to their local devices. etc. etc.
Someone can be the new lavabit...
@HardenedSteel this is a niche still awaiting for its entrepreneur.
Proton accepts btc (sigh (put +1 to the column that argues for them being a honeypot)). You might use trocador to exchange from btc to xmr and make your payment.
But, again, some sort of email service that takes XMR in exchange of service would be good. The operators of the email service can even use the XMR payment as a sort of counter-spam measure against bot accounts, and spam senders. The service can also use "Mullvad-style" random digits per the customer in order to track their XMR payments for the service, and demand no personally identifiable information, at all.
@Wave Looks good. So it indeed is a stack of 6 CPUs with their adjacent RAM sticks. Cool packaging. I wish the also did the noise measurement. I wonder if these X5's are also as ear-raping as btc-miners are.
@simping4xmrchan the only ones that should be responsible for caring about the children are their parents. Let go of the nanny-state bullshit.
>Instead, he points out the ease of creating incentives for individuals to voluntarily register for an Internet ID by making life significantly easier \[2\] for those who do so (similar to how a driver’s license is not required, but life is difficult without one).
This is also called "nudging". It is an important mass-control tool the modern techno-industrial-media state has.
http://ybgg2evrcdz37y2qes23ff3wjqjdn33tthgoagi76vhxytu4mpxiz5qd.onion/wiki/Nudge_theory?lang=en
@opal @ShadowRebel I agree. Do the tabulations. List the pros and cons, and see if you want to use matrix dendrite.
@simping4xmrchan fucking sucks. Outrageous to know there will be no push-back from the normies. We have a similar situation in Turkiye, too. One cannot travel without the all-seeing eye of the government digital surveillance systems...
Again, there won't be a push-back by the populace. They are too de-sensitized, made devoid of their agency, and turned into a cattle by the techno-capital's many forms of brainwashing entertainment systems.
Given this, what else legitimizes the fairy-tale of democracy, then? "Power to the people," but which of them are willing to use power?
@monerotalk this episode was quite a mess. Really wasted my time here trying to make up what the guest's claims really are. Doug was utterly unable to set the guest straight, and was unable to make him present some coherent train-of-thought arguments supporting his claims. The whole episode was a stream-of-consciousness style rambling coming from a seem-to-be deranged mind.
I expected better.
@ShadowRebel
>Mostly due to Monero people being so insane angry about the Bitcoin Maxis that are on Nostr
>Mostly due to Bitcoin maxis being so insane
Here. Fixed it for you.