201 private links
Why 2D maps are always incorrect because of elevation: they have to do some approximations.
building value on top of what’s standardised.
In short, under the right circumstances, success becomes more likely when cooperating as opposed to attempting to innovate on your own.
Nostr is a protocol to publish content without central server.
Everybody runs a client. It can be a native client, a web client, etc. To publish something, you write a post, sign it with your key and send it to multiple relays
A project to build a onepager blog on Nostr: https://github.com/dtonon/oracolo
In his 1960 book The Waste Makers, cultural theorist Vance Packard spoke of "the widespread faith of Americans that their technology can solve all their problems."
Bring value to the users
Similar to Days since last Facebook scandal, but for Web 3.
Similar to permaculture, but for computing.
À propos de Kyber, un logiciel de streaming
Voilà comment on traite ces alliés?
IO relève également que « les États-Unis représentent la moitié des 92 cas d'ingérence dans des entreprises françaises par extraterritorialité du droit (lawfare) relevés par la DGSI depuis 2020 jusqu'à fin 2022 », et que « la Chine se situe au deuxième rang de ce palmarès, mais très loin du nombre de cas attribués aux États-Unis ».
- Illegal cab company
- Illegal hotel chain
- Fake money for criminals
- Plagiarism machine
It's because after objectively examining the incentives and outcomes, fintech as an industry categorically fails to deliver meaningful progress to consumers. [...] It's about our obligations to each other and our duty to leave the world more equitable than we found it. Fintech, in its current form, categorically fails that duty.
About one disadvantage of the deployment on the edge
Arguments seem legit with links to original articles.
Generating cash has a bigger priority than reinforcing the company
Billions of dollars have shifted toward an entirely new category of technology without any real consideration of whether they'll be good products that users will like — or whether said products might actually harm users — because these companies are not interested in useful innovation or what will actually make their products better at the things they're meant to do. Instead, they are interested in pumping stocks and showing the ability to grow their revenues every single quarter, even if doing so doesn't make the actual purpose of the company stronger.
Big tech companies try so hard to follow trends instead of reinforcing their core product.
Google delayed launching its own AI-based chatbot for years out of ethical concerns, but then rushed out an embarrassing, partially broken version in response to Microsoft's moves.
The goal is not to build the best product for the user anymore. "The user's experience has become subordinate to the company's stock price."
These companies have strayed from their core products — helping you find information, buy things, or connect with people — because their focus is no longer on innovation or providing a service, but finding a "good enough" service that they can then sell advertising around.
Venture capital and other investors have pushed for a growth-first model, prioritizing "line goes up" metrics rather than building a useful product and sustainable business.
instead of trying to meaningfully innovate and improve the useful services they provide, these companies have instead chased short-term fads or attempted to totally overhaul their businesses in a desperate attempt to win the favor of Wall Street investors. As a result, our collective online experience is getting worse — it's harder to buy the things you want to buy, more convoluted to search for information, and more difficult to socialize with people.
Facebook, a website ostensibly for finding and connecting with your friends, constantly floods users' feeds with sponsored (or "recommended") content, and seems to bury the things people want to see under what Facebook decides is relevant.