Right, but maybe OP has some more exotic method of shorting the company. Otherwise I'm not sure why they are patting themselves on the back for having risked nothing and gained nothing.
> Right, but maybe OP has some more exotic method of shorting the company.
It is possible to do this with standard CFDs (Contract for Difference) to long or short any company once they have listed on the stock exchange and this is available in EU countries and outside of the US which CFDs are banned.
SSB was designed by an ocean sailor to be a social network that was infrequently synchronized and then only by local connection. The idea being, when sailors went ashore or rafted up for a gam to catch up on the scuttlebutt, they could synch their databases and have something to read on the next leg of their journey.
Blockchain tech was used to assure that messages created by others had not been altered in transit.
SSB ran into design limitations when the more recent developers tried to imitate something like Mastodon. It can work, but it's definitely idiosyncratic. It does tend to grow a large db, but space is rather cheap these days.
He is pivoting into a new protocol which is intended to preserve the community aspect of SSB, while providing important factors, like the need to delete previous posts.
The last 3 times I tried to use it the ~5 projects you had to run/put together to get any higher-level usable application were always in some way incompatible with each other, as they always seem to be in a constant mode of refactoring. Figuring out a set of compatible versions looked like more like a dark ritual than anything else.
I'm not sure. The last time I tried using it, I had a similar experience.
Nobody was ever able to coalesce a coherent UX/UI around ssb, the core contributors at the time weren't interested in scaling the network without outside funding.
I was working on implementing lighting fast discovery for ssb using a distributed BitTorrent-like tracker. Getting onto the ssb network took way too long. Still, there were not many users on the network, and nobody seemed interested in growing.
Hi Marak! Let me know if you think this response is fair: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=27252331. I'd summarize it as "we used a MIT library to generate some data, and unbeknownst to us, this MIT library linked to proprietary data. We then immediately removed such data once we found out."
If you don't think that's a fair reaction, would love to hear your perspective and buy you a coffee next time I'm in NYC. I'll send you an email now. :)
I've spent approximately 13 months with WebGPU + WASM + CSS + JavaScript, building high-performance gaming solutions that run in browser. It's possible to run graphics at Nintendo64 level quality on a potato. JavaScript as an orchestration layer for WASM is exceptionally performant.
I think what the people at thanks.dev and Front End Masters are doing is great, and I appreciate what they are doing. I made it on this list and got $5 for something. Great.
I've spoken with armini about Thanks.dev numerous times—a great person to talk with and knowledgeable about open-source economics.
The brass tax here is that the peak of open-source software written by humans has already passed us. The following steps we'll be seeing are things like LLMs, which are trained on the entire NPM registry and can solve any known domain problem through curated APIs.
The next few years of open-source will be unglorified janitorial positions with minimal pay. Most of the intelligent maintainers have already offloaded their projects to others.
Anecdotally, I have found that open-source projects with overly abundant funding have perverse incentives for their user base and ultimately harm society.
Time loop logic is a hypothetical system of computation that exploits the Novikov self-consistency principle. In this system the computer is able to send the result of a computation backwards through time and rely upon the self-consistency principle to force the sent result to be correct.
I've written about this before. Instantaneous data transfer with zero lag is theoretically possible through use of quantum entanglement. You can use this same technique to build a doomsday clock similar to the film "Tomorrowland".
> I've written about this before. Instantaneous data transfer with zero lag is theoretically possible through use of quantum entanglement.
I hope you wrote a correction wherever you wrote this. Quantum entanglement can not transfer information by itself (because of the no-communication theorem) therefore any data transfer protocol that uses entanglement must also use some other form of communication (e.g. classical communication), and therefore is at most as fast as your other communication method is.
Maybe in general, but this is in the context of "time loop logic". Ordinarily, you can have entangled states where measuring both parts will produce the same (random) outcome. Unfortunately the outcome cannot be influenced by either party, so it's useless for communication, as you say.
Now suppose that the first party resolves to go back in time and kill his grandfather unless the bits he measures are precisely the message he wishes to send. The universe can't tolerate the paradox, so it is corralled into the only non-paradoxical outcome: both parties read the desired message. Something like that, anyway.
Ah I guess I misunderstood what was being claimed. I thought the claim was "you can use entanglement to instantly send messages", but it's actually "you can use entanglement and this model of how time travel might work to send messages instantly".
Obviously these are rather different. In fact I feel like the entanglement doesn't even help in the time-travel protocol. If you want to send messages instantly and you can send messages back in time, you can "just" send yourself the message distance/c seconds in the past and send it then. Some messing around let's you arrange for it to arrive at exactly the time you want to send it in the future.
Assuming what I wrote above is correct (I don't actually know anything about closed time-like curves), it's actually weirder than just going back in time and mailing a letter early so it arrives when you want. Specifically, once you set up the entangled state, no other communication between the parties is necessary.
Yeah I understand the proposed protocol using entanglement. I'm just saying that if you're assuming we have access to the ability to send messages back in time there are much simpler protocols to achieve instant communication /without/ having to do anything involving entanglement.
IMO this is like those discussions where someone says FTL communication is possible by using a very long solid rod, jiggling one and and monitoring the other... except on closer inspection it'll only work if the rod is infinitely rigid, which is already a violation of many of the same underlying physical laws.
So it's a kind of circular logic, or at best an observation that having one kind of supernatural magic power would let you cause another kind of supernatural magic outcome.
In this case, if only I had a time machine I could break the speed of light. (Or possibly vice-versa.)
> The principle asserts that if an event exists that would cause a paradox or any "change" to the past whatsoever, then the probability of that event is zero. It would thus be impossible to create time paradoxes.
> Instantaneous data transfer with zero lag is theoretically possible through use of quantum entanglement.
No, that's a common myth about quantum stuff.
The entangled relationship can't be used to transfer information on its own. Whatever you sample from the "instant parts" can only be checked and understood after additional context arrives in a conventional way--limited by the speed of light and the flow of time.
Ok human. You can read the Hans Moravec paper on CTC and time loop logic to understand Novikov self-consistency principle is formalized, yes you must run the computation for as long as it would have already taken or result will never arrive.
I say through "through use of quantum entanglement" as glossy term for reader. Crystalline quantum circuits are not really existing yet so is all scifi.
I won't be able to repsond to further posts in this thread. Cheers.
Time-loop logic does not violate causality. We are able to retrieve the answer instantly because we have committed to spending sixty seconds in the future calculating the answer and sending it back.
Maybe quantum superposition is just the universe compiling.
The blog-post asserts causality is not violated, but the author contradicts it elsewhere by claiming the hypothetical system would grant other benefits like "zero latency" gaming, which in turn means arbitrary data (e.g. human decisions) can somehow travel back-and-forth faster than light.
Then FTL communication opens up an enormous can of causality-worms.
That's a point, and I let them expand their definition of causality to include a chain of events flowing in a reversed arrow of time. I think they hand-wave away all those worms with the precept that any attempt to cause a paradox or other inconsistency would fail in practice. But I'd love to hear some examples that come to mind of problems that crutch doesn't fix.