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qqqult

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qqqult
·anno scorso·discuss
> for the sake of argument, is there any way to introduce monetary policy into crypto currency so as to correct for unwanted inflation/deflation

yeah and you don't even need to change bitcoin - just use a stablecoin over-collateralized by BTC built on the bticoin network. In essence these systems work with $1 of the stablecoin backed by $N dollars (N > 1.6) of the the backing asset (BTC). Then they use a smart contract system of price oracles, liquidations & interest rate curves to balance supply, demand and risk parameters. It's pretty much an over-collateralized lending protocol that issues its own asset that is pegged to $1

This has worked well for the past 11 years with MakerDAO on Ethereum and it's stablecoin DAI. I think at its peak the DAI stablecoin had around $7 billion in circulation and was about 5-10% the size of USDT, now it's about half that. However, high treasury interest rates and low interest in decentralized stablecoins have made more "traditional" stablecoins like USDT, USDC vastly more profitable and successful. In recent times even DAI has been trying to become more like USDC and USDT with treasuries held in intermediaries
qqqult
·anno scorso·discuss
BTC ranged between $0.30 and $27 back in 2011 so not quite
qqqult
·anno scorso·discuss
but is it the weight loss driving all those anti-inflammation benefits
qqqult
·anno scorso·discuss
frfr?
qqqult
·anno scorso·discuss
eh, it was fair to say that 8 years ago...

now it's way easier to track public blockchain transaction chains on Bitcoin, Ethereum and the like than it is to track bank transfers across countries
qqqult
·anno scorso·discuss
[flagged]
qqqult
·anno scorso·discuss
Does EOF make this easier / more efficient?
qqqult
·anno scorso·discuss
is_deleted = True update is in progress
qqqult
·anno scorso·discuss
4 foot notes?

This guy Pratchetts.
qqqult
·anno scorso·discuss
They did.

This was a multisig - meaning M out of N signatures from different signing devices were needed to sign a transaction. The attacker infected enough signer devices to go unnoticed and the signers failed to verify what they were signing on air-gapped devices
qqqult
·anno scorso·discuss
not at all
qqqult
·anno scorso·discuss
bybit makes $100 million a month and has substantial excess reserves
qqqult
·anno scorso·discuss
That would have been a somewhat reasonable (although unconvincing) reply if you didn't also write 7 other lengthy comments in this thread that were 3 hours apart
qqqult
·anno scorso·discuss
I did that last summer, I compared the performance of different english word embedding models, as far as I remember the best ones were GloVe and a few knowledge graph word embeddings.

None of them were better than a human at giving hints for 3+ words though
qqqult
·anno scorso·discuss
May the gods give you everything you ask for
qqqult
·anno scorso·discuss
hardware wallets are a safe transaction signing device NOT a seed storage device

You use them to sign transactions that are perfectly safe even if your computer / phone where you initiated the transaction is infected with malware. They give you a chance to confirm that the transaction you're signingon the hw wallet is the one you initiated on your computer.

> daily spend limit

> different panic codes

> Co-signing by third-parties

What you describe already exists in "software multisig wallets" on smart contract blockchains. In essence they're smart contracts that require n of m signatures to initiate a transaction and can handle variable spending rules, custom signing schemes, 3rd party signers, things like 2FA / email for signing. In theory they can be implemented for non-smart contract blockchains like Bitcoin using multi party computation schemes like FROST (https://github.com/ZcashFoundation/frost) but that's a lot harder
qqqult
·anno scorso·discuss
Transaction rollbacks. In this case the USDT ransom was blocked by Tether. Rollbacks for non-centralized tokens & networks goes against the goal of most protocols though, so it's unlikely to become the norm.
qqqult
·anno scorso·discuss
It's even more stupid. The ransom was paid in Ether (ETH) which the kidnappers then exchanged to Tether stablecoins (USDT). Tether is a centralized company that can freeze and block any blockchain address from using the stablecoin that they issue and that's exactly what they did, they froze the ransom.

We'll probably have more details about this in a few days just goes to show how you can't hide on public blockchain ledgers.
qqqult
·anno scorso·discuss
can't you use it through litellm https://github.com/open-webui/open-webui/issues/3288
qqqult
·anno scorso·discuss
or run a kokoro tts docker container on your own hardware, the hw requirements aren't crazy: https://github.com/remsky/Kokoro-FastAPI