Also, being a "Russian asset", whatever that means, doesn't affect anything. If he refuses to release dirt against Russia, the would be leaker can go to someone else or just release it themselves. He isn't the gatekeeper of all leaked information.
Justifying it this way is just a ploy to punish the whistleblower and I can't believe how many people go along with it.
> I can't believe I'm the only one thinking this way, I know there are plenty of so-called "clock punchers/pragmatists"[0] who refuse to play the game. So I'm asking you:
> how do you pull it off?
I'm honest to a fault in every way, with my own personality.
When I'm depressed this is self-destructive, but when I'm happy it seems to invigorating to the team mates and friends around me. This seems to click positively with people in general, gives me a lot of rope ;). Confidence in your own truth, I think is the key one-liner here.
> How do you survive?
Living true is freeing, the privilege to be able to do it a blessing. But if your 'truth' is that you're a bitter, shitty person. It will kill you.
Live true but have your core-motives, your convictions, in order. 'Be a positive influence on everyone and anyone I interact with' is a good start.
> What do you tell your managers and your interviewers?
Interviews: play the game. Haven't ever tried the snowflake approach to interviews, haven't seen any evidence to give me the confidence needed to pull it off.
Managers: truth, it's a slow build before you can dump deep truth on people, but bit by bit, let them know what you're about and WHY.
Depending on the temperament of the manager, they either become mates, or they respect/disapprove from a distance.
Hopefully you can pull some value from this stranger <3
Ugh, I've been using right-click > copy image address pretty habitually everywhere else.
Guess I gotta get in the habit of doing it with google images now too.
The change was not on behalf of “bureaucracy” but a market intrest. Getty is in the business of producing and selling photography. It’s all very transparent, actually. For example, when you see a group of press agents at an event (any event), at least a few of the photographers work for Getty.
Most cryptos are definitely pump and dump ponzis designed to eat your money, there is definitely a technocracy-like barrier for entry if you want to join the crypto bandwagon. Focus your time and energy on BTC, ETH and an anonymous coin like XMR. Any other offering should be met with skepticism.
>Focus your time and energy on BTC, ETH and an anonymous coin like XMR. Any other offering should be met with skepticism.
To elaborate/explain on this point for those less familiar: those three cryptocurrencies actually are based on real technical innovation, and have developer communities producing more technical innovation. There are many other cryptocurrencies that have zero technical innovation (or completely nonsense innovation) and are merely clones of previous cryptocurrencies with some identifiers tweaked, made purely so investors can pump and dump.
The article in part 5 ("The decline of Maximalism") seems to be criticizing the idea that people would prefer some cryptocurrencies to others, which is completely ridiculous. There are real differences / issues with many.
Technical innovation is not the only type of innovation happening in the crypto space. There are tokens being developed whose innovations are financial, social, political, and economic. Don't assume technical innovation is the end all be all, Ethereum's technical innovation allows for the other types of innovation to occur, for example.
To strengthen my argument, you wouldn't expect every startup on the Internet to develop their own Apache server, HTTP protocol, and all the other technical innovations that allow for their business to exist, would you?
I don't exactly disagree; I think there are some ICOs that are promising. (And I'm happy that many are being built on top of a pre-existing blockchain like Ethereum's rather than pretending they're secure without a large group of miners securing their blockchain.)
Maybe I should drop the word "technical": There are many projects out there with no real innovation whatsoever that were created only to facilitate pump-and-dumps rather than to enable some kind of innovation.
> Technical innovation is not the only type of innovation happening in the crypto space.
It's the only kind that matters; all other innovation should be built on top of those using the technically innovative base as a building block. Launching "new" coins that are merely clones are simply going to lead to failure. Bitcoin is not like Apache, you can't just grab its code and use it and think you've got what bitcoin has. Bitcoin is not its code, Bitcoin is its network, Bitcoin is like Facebook, network effects dominate, and you must use actual Bitcoin, not just launch a Bitcoin clone, to benefit from it.
> To strengthen my argument, you wouldn't expect every startup on the Internet to develop their own Apache server, HTTP protocol, and all the other technical innovations that allow for their business to exist, would you?
I don't want them making their own Apache server in the exact same way I don't want them making their own coin. They should use an existing standardized setup. A smart contract can be useful. A "coin in support of X charitable effort, come mine today" is pretty much nonsense.
What functional technical innovation is there in ETH that is currently available for use? Some real, usable product that people actively utilize today that's unique and has tangible value?
Ethereum itself is just a building block. It only appeared few years ago, and applications using it are being built right now.
You can see applications built on it -- decentralized exchanges, prediction markets, derivates/derivative markets, gambling sites and so on.
It's kinda ridiculous to demand "actively utilize today", although some apps are in active use, but they are pretty niche.
At this point we talk about what _can_ be built, not what _was_ built.
As for 'tangible value', tangibility is very subjective. There are still people who claim that Bitcoin has no tangible value, but I bet if you were living in a country with an unstable banking system, ridiculous capital controls and high crime rate, you'd see Bitcoin's value
There are many ICOs and tokens on other platforms, including Bitcoin. E.g. [see here](https://coinmarketcap.com/tokens/). #3 and #4 are on Omni, which is Bitcoin-based.
Ethereum is actually technically inferior as a platform for tokens, but it has a fantastic community which is very much into tokens, so that's why it is much bigger than what you see on other platforms (BitShares, Nxt, Omni, Counterparty, WAVES...)
Ethereum-based tokens have grown to 85% of the total token market cap. Most if not all of the applications built around Ethereum's ERC20 standard, like Etherdelta and 0x, are possible because the EVM enables Turing Completeness. That makes Ethereum far superior to the other platforms mentioned as a token platform.
I've seen some you could argue are a pump and dump, an actual Ponzi Scheme on a blockchain would be nearly impossible, it relies on a central ledger so the bad actor can disproportionately transfer the new investors' assets to old.
There's been a recent example of someone running a Ponzi using BTC, but that's not an example of a currency being a Ponzi, which is a thing more specific than "scam."
Development moves faster and with far less bureaucratic hurdles than with Bitcoin. No contentious forks (thus far), they had SegWit first and chances are they will have working, beyond proof-of-concept Lightning first.
Err... Development is actually just rebasing from bitcoin. I've not seen anything go the other way.
In particular, as coauthor of the lightning spec, I assure you that we're all working on bitcoin. Litecoin happened because it was trivial; interestingly, we've deferred Bitcoin mainnet because it's likely to attract real users, who'll risk real money.
Just to affirm what this guy said, these reasons are pretty much why LTC should be on your radar. The heretic in me actually things that LTC could potentially have more value than BTC these days just because they seem to have their shit together development-wise.
More decentralization because you don't essentially need a special purpose FPGA (or whatever is popular these days) specifically meant for mining coins, as these special purpose machines are typically more centralized in larger farms.
I'm not familiar enough with LTC to say if this will continue for the future, but thats the standard argument in favor.
If this is your main reasoning argument for Litecoin, then I have bad news for you, as you're completely wrong. Litecoin's PoW algorithm uses Scrypt and is second only to Bitcoin's SHA256 as far as ASIC-based mining goes. This has been the case for 3 years now and at this point Scrypt ASICs are hashing between 100-200X more efficient both on a $/H and W/H basis vs GPUs.
(Anyone with a passing familiarity w/ CCs would know this, but still, it feels like statements that are so blatantly counterfactual should probably be noted.)
Would love to add Blocknet to this. They are the only project that currently has the capability of enabling cross-chain atomic swaps and creates interoperability by allowing data to be passed with these swaps as well.
It certainly seems to have elements of parody, though if it were about the DAO specifically, I would think he might have said something about hard forks.
It's just mobs justifying hate, its the most ironic shit I've ever seen. It just fills me with more discontent and distrust of the majority and the mob.
Idiocracy is getting less and less satirical by the day.
There is always a technical solution, that's the beauty of it :)