I think the deep state let us have winlator to entice us to keep using cell phones.
It's working on me, for now, but I wonder if it's a sign of weakness and we're close to the day of technological freedom.
Still might work eventually. The end state would be the same as Monero - some people have their security compromised, but most people cannot be tracked down via their transactions and most people's money cannot all be tracked down without their keys. The IRS loses the ability to just freely track everything at once in one big comprehensive view.
what is the optimal #nostr #relay setup? I'm using nostr:npub1nz64zngcqm8vj8nhrdkcjpfwn2rcaqysnxec88tqfclp5afrpglsqm0w5y
#asknostr
I'm not sure, but nos.lol is probably the relay I've had the best luck with overall (when it comes to having my posts accepted)
When they update bitcoin with silent payments it might work
Can confirm as an ugly fat person except smoking isn't attractive either way, the brain is just glitching out when people think so
Yeah, it might not be the city lover's city but it's the best lol
He openly hated where it was going before he died and would hate it now, including the IPO. He wasn't driven by money and never had anything to worry about financially from a young age because the academic system accidentally gave him recognition for his genius early on before they figured out they can't afford to let the smartest people from the recent generations get famous for being that smart.
Aaron Swartz would have loved nostr.
Effectively the culmination of his lifeβs work.
1999: At the age of 12, he co-authored the RSS 1.0 specification, which is a format for syndicating web content.
2000: Swartz became a member of the Creative Commons organization, which aims to expand the range of creative works available for others to build upon legally.
2002: He founded the Infogami platform, which later merged with Reddit.
2005: Swartz joined Reddit as a co-founder after a merger with Infogami.
2006: He left Reddit and began working on various projects, including the development of the web application framework, "Open Library," which aimed to create a web page for every book ever published.
2008: Swartz was involved in the development of the "Demand Progress" organization, which focused on issues related to internet freedom and government transparency.
2010: He played a significant role in the campaign against the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and the Protect IP Act (PIPA), advocating for internet freedom. He also developed a tool that allowed users to download large amounts of data from PACER (Public Access to Court Electronic Records), which was typically behind a paywall.
2011: Swartz was arrested for downloading a large number of academic journal articles from JSTOR with the intent to distribute them freely. The U.S. Attorney's Office in Massachusetts pursued the case against Swartz, and he faced the possibility of severe penalties, including up to 35 years in prison.
2012: On January 11, Aaron Swartz tragically passed away at the age of 26. He allegedly took his own life due to the pressure of government prosecution.
https://cdn.satellite.earth/43780cc29e73f0ac8a226aba6e3ca93422a9022c4b27422995e5b99127d8d900.mp4
There's no proof he took his own life. The strongest evidence is his girlfriend at the time seeming to believe it completely, but that's also the point of making it look like a suicide. Inconclusive evidence to convict the man of suicide in my court.
I wouldn't believe you if you didn't zap folks generational wealth on here
I assume you generously shared the other half of the bagel with them
Recognized on sight as a NY bagel but I'm not jealous because I'm also familiar with some of the people, cops, and other things you had to walk past to get to that bagel. I pity you if anything, brother. Stay strong and enjoy your delicious reward
I haven't had much of an issue on Primal and I think I was away when people first started talking about this thing because I don't even know what the big deal is supposed to be
No, that's another reason they'd fire me

