The Replace-By-Fee flag in Bitcoin is effectively a built-in paid accelerator that covers all miners. I think the reason inefficiencies like this exist is because a lot of wallets either don't implement it or don't have it on by default.
How exactly does a currency go from a value of zero to trillions (were it to become a major global settlement currency) in a decentralised way while maintaining stable purchasing power?
That would imply that since it was worth nothing in 2009/2010 it should remain worthless forever to maintain its purchasing power.
Same (2016,m5,8gb,512gb). It's a really great little laptop, and has been my daily driver until catalina hit. The only people I ever see shitting on the 12" macbook are people who've never owned one.
Most of that stems from the fact that the US dollar is the main global reserve currency - so people around the world are willing to accept them in exchange for real goods and services.
This won't be the case forever. Once it flips, the magically cheap overseas goods become the expensive imported goods only rich people can afford.
Not necessarily well, but definitely with more focus. One 9/11 - you get a united country (for the first year after at least). A 9/11 equivalent every couple of days - "but I don't wanna wear a mask!"
> A lot of people working for NSO (or the NSA) see themselves as making a personal sacrifice for public safety.
And we're saying they are wrong, actively harming public safety, and need to somehow be held accountable for their actions and the actions of the organisations they support.
Spotify just pays the tax, but my understanding was they filed an antitrust complaint in the EU, because Apple is charging them while offering a competing music service.