Avatar
Ryan Wilkins
cc97551f4c883c9d2f027d95f76eb50448865b5f174ad0c46368fad7c7a3c8f1
Tech nerd, airplane and drone pilot, dad, Amateur Radio operator, Bitcoin believer

The BS we’ve been sold. nostr:note1rp4qtp95s43htysfw06zzlql2j72rahx9al0fr96nekxq08nnags3kcr0g

Gn Nostr. I’m tired.

I made a loaf of cranberry sourdough bread. I left it in the oven just a minute or so too long, but it’ll still taste great. #bakestr #baking

I’m not overly worried about AI taking my job.

Fading out. Tomorrow comes soon enough. Maybe $100k comes tonight. GN.

I’m still counting on those 100k sats you’re going to send me if the price doesn’t reach $100k today. 😉

Replying to Avatar War Monitor

I’ve always used nostr:npub18m76awca3y37hkvuneavuw6pjj4525fw90necxmadrvjg0sdy6qsngq955, which I consider the best app for iOS. However, I’m giving nostr:npub12vkcxr0luzwp8e673v29eqjhrr7p9vqq8asav85swaepclllj09sylpugg a chance now, especially with all the excitement around this new update. Let’s see if it’s really worth trying! 👀

In the past I’ve primarily used Damus, but it has a few little annoying things that Primal doesn’t have. But in trying Primal, I’ve always ended up back with Damus. Maybe the Primal 2.0 release will be better.

Not original content, but still pretty cool.

I don’t care what somebody’s pronouns are and it’s just extra useless information on the screen that I don’t care to see. If a minority of users wanted and got pronouns support, can some (maybe minor, maybe not) amount of us get the ability to turn off the display of pronouns in app settings?

GM. The snow has started falling here in northern Ohio, USA. I guess it’s that time of the year.

Alright. The moment you’ve all been waiting for is finally here. Ladies and gentlemen, I am tired so GN. Sleep well and dream of stacking sats. 🥱😴💤

Replying to Deleted Account

Google, based in Mountain View, California, has an illegal monopoly in search, a federal court has ruled, and is fighting another government lawsuit aimed at its online ad business. (Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
By Eva Dou
November 20, 2024 at 10:55 p.m. ET
The Justice Department wants to force Google to sell off its Chrome browser and make other major changes to address an earlier ruling that the internet giant runs an illegal monopoly in search, prosecutors told a Washington court Wednesday, setting a marker in the case before the incoming Trump administration makes its own determinations about how to proceed.
“Google must promptly and fully divest Chrome, to a buyer approved by the Plaintiffs in their sole discretion, subject to terms that the Court and Plaintiffs approve,” the Justice Department said in its proposed final judgment.
Judge Amit P. Mehta of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia ruled in August that Google’s search business was an illegal monopoly, in a landmark decision. Mehta will decide by next summer what remedies to impose on Google to restore competition in the market. Google, which is already planning to appeal, now has a month to respond to the Justice Department’s proposal.
The prospects of the case are complicated by the imminent transition to a new Trump administration, with the Justice Department’s approach potentially shifting under a new attorney general. Biden’s antitrust enforcers are handing over a string of monopoly cases against Big Tech companies to Trump, after an aggressive four-year run to prosecute the cases. While the Biden administration’s approach has centered on the power of Big Tech companies to stifle competition and control markets, Trump and his advisers have expressed more concern about their power to control public discourse.


Biden’s Justice Department had said last month that it was considering a breakup of Google among its recommendations to Mehta. Days later, Trump told Bloomberg editor in chief John Micklethwait that he feared a breakup might “destroy” Google, noting that “China is afraid of Google.”
“What you can do without breaking it up is make sure that it’s more fair,” Trump said, adding that he had called “the head of Google” recently to complain that more “bad” stories than “good” stories about himself were showing up in Google’s news results. “I think it’s a whole rigged deal.”
It is unclear what this shift in emphasis would mean for these court cases. Some antitrust experts and former enforcers say Trump could seek a settlement in the Google search case rather than await an outcome from the court that he could not control.
There is precedent for such a shift: George W. Bush’s Justice Department settled a major monopoly case against Microsoft, after Clinton administration prosecutors pursued the company’s breakup.

Well that’s a surprise.