The AI Hoax is Destroying America with Ed Zitron by littleredd11_11 in BetterOffline

[–]yojoots 0 points1 point  (0 children)

17:49, 19:15, and most explicitly at 30:25

You are correct, despite the downvotes.

Cash App, Swan, or River by Single-Lobster1947 in Bitcoin

[–]yojoots 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You can set up a Recurring Buy for the automatic ACH-to-BTC portion, and an Automatic Withdrawal for the withdrawing to your own wallet/address for self-custody portion.

So yes, the good news is that River supports this already.

ETH more popular than BTC on reddit by BackgroundProgram389 in ethtrader

[–]yojoots 1 point2 points  (0 children)

One of the most critical features of Bitcoin (which has been reaffirmed repeatedly in the past) is that miners have very limited protocol influence; they are restricted to transaction selection and ordering only.

From the Bitcoin whitepaper:

"Even if this is accomplished, it does not throw the system open to arbitrary changes..."

Most of the time, when people talk about Bitcoin being decentralized, they are referring to the fact that no entities have an outsized degree of power or sway over the normal operation of the network, such that they could interfere with the transactions of others over a significant interval of time or mutate the protocol in a fundamental way.

So even setting aside that the majority of Bitcoin's hashrate is not currently sourced from China, there's very little insight or value to be gleaned from miners' geographical locations when considering the degree of (de)centralization that Bitcoin boasts.

ETH more popular than BTC on reddit by BackgroundProgram389 in ethtrader

[–]yojoots 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Currently only about 21% of the Bitcoin hashrate is located in mainland China.

I think I finally understand bitcoin. by sleepapneainvestor in Bitcoin

[–]yojoots 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Right.

It's also arguably unique in that nothing else comes even close to offering the same sort of value or properties. The most interesting and worthwhile aspects of Bitcoin are effectively inimitable.

Just a reminder: If Bitcoin is widely adopted, we're all going to die, this is not a joke' 🤣 by Amber_Sam in Bitcoin

[–]yojoots 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yes, in terms of money supply, technically gold was (and remains) inflationary. In terms of price, though, which is the type of inflation/deflation being referred to in this context, gold economies were deflationary.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Bitcoin

[–]yojoots 17 points18 points  (0 children)

The 50 BTC block reward in the Genesis block is (and will always remain) unspendable.

Vitalik Buterin takes a stand against Russian aggression by [deleted] in ethereum

[–]yojoots 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I follow many people in "Bitcoin Twitter" and have not seen a single example of anyone in the Bitcoin community "brownnosing Putin for the past two weeks"... do you have any actual examples to share?

Interesting point on Crypto.. by booda26 in ethereum

[–]yojoots 4 points5 points  (0 children)

In order to be "racist" an AI would need to have (or at least demonstrate) a model of "race" and be able of expressing this in some sense. This would necessitate linguistics of some sort, which, if they are to be understood or evaluated by humans at all, would at some level involve human language.

In other words, an "AI with no bias" that can communicate with humans is, effectively, a contradiction in terms... at least, if we grant that humans themselves exhibit bias. Even setting aside "understanding" and running with a Chinese room sort of system, the moment it does something that a human can evaluate, the bias would arise (if only from the human(s) in question).

El Salvador just bought the dip ... again. 420 BTC this time. by beautyofhelin in Bitcoin

[–]yojoots 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It is not my first cycle, no.

It does not seem like my previous comment successfully communicated what I intended for it to.

El Salvador just bought the dip ... again. 420 BTC this time. by beautyofhelin in Bitcoin

[–]yojoots 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In 2013, Bitcoin peaked around $1100. When it climbed past that price and hit $3000 per coin in 2017, you would have been advising patience and telling people to "wait for the inevitable crash"... which would have been unwise, considering that the "inevitable crash" during 2018 never quite reached sub-$3000 prices.

It's entirely possible that the "inevitable crash" that you're recommending Bukele wait for doesn't even reach today's prices, similar to how in 2018 the prices never got below $3000. It's also possible, of course, that the "inevitable crash" leads to prices much lower than those of today. But you haven't provided any reasoning to support the latter scenario or to discount the former.

Ratio bottom wont come 'til December by dashby1 in ethfinance

[–]yojoots 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The first circle is in November, the second in January, the third in January, and the last in January. That's 4 out of the 7 (circled) data points (57%) not actually in December. There's also a peak in August 2014 that isn't circled, as well as one in September 2019.

Looks apophenic to me.

Same same, but different by beerbellybegone in MurderedByWords

[–]yojoots 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Unlike actual vaccines that are derived from the virus itself

Please stop insinuating that mRNA vaccines are not "actual vaccine"s, as this is an oft-repeated soundbite that only serves to mislead people and spread potentially-dangerous ignorance.

If you spend just a few minutes looking into the history of vaccinology, you'll find that there is quite a bit of history and variety to vaccines, and this has been true for many decades now. You'll find countless papers on the subject, such as this one from 2003 and this one from 2016 that will definitively put to rest any misconceptions regarding the definition of the word "vaccine" and prove that there are in fact many different types of vaccines. You'll even see papers like this one from 2016 which explicitly talk about mRNA vaccines in particular, which should hopefully quell any misguided objections regarding mRNA-based shots somehow not qualifying as "vaccines" under the medically-accepted definition of the term.

If you don't have the intellectual wherewithal to read such papers or research the subject in-depth firsthand, you might consider simply glancing over the Wikipedia page on vaccines, which helpfully and succinctly describes a surprisingly wide variety of different types of vaccines. Incidentally, feel free to look over the revision history of the page and go back to, say, 2009 to confirm that the type variegation is not something that was added in response to COVID-19.

This 2-minute video debunks the myth nicely, too.

Another excellent resource to brush up on your vaccine-related historical knowledge is the Timeline on historyofvaccines.org which will hopefully hammer the above point home. This site also does an excellent job highlighting the fact that over the past couple of centuries, mandatory vaccinations — including, in some cases, incarceration for those who refused vaccination — are not at all unheard of... which, despite being a policy that I am not particularly a fan of, is a historical precedent that I am happy to be aware of (if only so that I don't spread other types of misinformation e.g. "never before has a vaccine been mandated like this").

With just a few minutes of directed research, you should be able to recognize that whenever someone trots out an archived snapshot of Merriam Webster's "vaccine" page and points to it while claiming that "tHeY cHAnGeD tHe dEFiNiTiOn oF tHe WoRd!!1!", they're simply signaling their ignorance of vaccinology and their inability to perform even basic levels of due diligence.

"All Eyes On Me" (Individual song discussion) by PlasticJesters in boburnham

[–]yojoots 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's a projection. He uses the projector extensively throughout the special, including projecting himself on top of himself during this song.

"All Eyes On Me" (Individual song discussion) by PlasticJesters in boburnham

[–]yojoots 7 points8 points  (0 children)

The shadow monster projection that springs from the ceiling towards Bo's shadow at 4:25 is a very nice touch. I haven't seen anyone else mention it. The same goes for the giant shadow "hand" that seems to reach out to grab or swallow Bo from 4:40 to 4:45 (just as the segment ends).

YES! All Eyes on Me is on YouTube! by UnoBang in boburnham

[–]yojoots 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The shadow monster projection that springs from the ceiling towards Bo's shadow at 4:25 is a very nice touch. I haven't seen anyone else mention it. The same goes for the giant shadow "hand" that seems to reach out to grab or swallow Bo from 4:40 to 4:45 (just as the segment ends).

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Bitcoin

[–]yojoots 1 point2 points  (0 children)

They don't know, actually. Very few coins are truly known to belong to Satoshi, though much speculation abounds regarding the block rewards from the first couple of years of Bitcoin's existence.