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> Binance founder Changpeng Zhao — who supposedly has no managerial role at Binance after he and the company were criminally charged in the US — announced that Binance would reimburse users who lost funds.

100% sure about this? How?


> The upside is that your property can't be confiscated by "centralized daddy."

Really? Most crypto is not anonymous, it is at best pseudonymous. If a big enough government agency wants your crypto, they will get it.


It can be totally anonymous if you can use a non-KYC exchange way of acquiring it. And then again, you can buy monero or zcash, then buy bitcoin again. I could start up a new open source wallet on an air gapped machine, go to a local bitcoin meetup, and buy bitcoin for cash.

Yes, and a motivated man with a heavy wrench could take it too. That doesn't mean that permissionless currency isn't valuable. It just means that my threats have been reduced from nanny took my money and man with wrench to just man with wrench.

Back when I was studying computer science, I was taking the OS exam and the part about Lamport timestamp [0] was optional, but I had studied it because I loved it. When I mentioned it to my professor, he was so happy to hear something new that day that he asked me to describe it in details. This was the year 2001.

Many years later, in 2020, I ended up living in San Francisco, and I had the fortune to meet Leslie Lamport after I sent him a cold email. Lovely and smart guy. This is the text of the first part of that email, just for your curiosity:

Hey Leslie!

You have accompanied me for more than 20 years. I first met your name when studying Lamport timestamps.

And then on, and on, and on, up to a few minutes ago, when I realized that you are also behind the paper and the title of "Byzantine Generals problem", renamed after the "Albanian" generals to the suggestion of Jack Goldberg. Who is he? [1]

[0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamport_timestamp

[1]: Jack Goldberg (now retired) was a computer scientist and Lamport's manager at SRI.


> To visualize $1.5 billion: if you cashed that check out in $100 bills and stacked them one on top of another, it would reach a five story building. For ordinary plebeians like us, at the average US salary of around $75K, you’d need to work 20,000 years to earn that.

No, we don't need to visualize that.


It also seems, really low?

A stack of bills is roughly 0.5 inches. Assuming a 12-ft joist-to-joist spacing, that's 12 feet per floor \times 12 inches per foot \times 2 stacks per inch = 288 stacks per floor = $2.88M per floor since a stack of 100s is $10k

So that would be a 1,000M / 2.88M ~ 347 story building.

Or is my unit conversion wildly off from dealing with sick kids over the holidays?


Hahaha why are people so mad at this visualization? I thought it was pretty cool!

The average US salary isn't $75k btw. That figure is usually quoted from the reported median household income in 2022[1]. The median personal income, which is the figure that should* be quoted, was around $45k for 2024[2].

[1] https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/MEHOINUSA646N [2] https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/MEPAINUSA646N


Most people are not doers but losers. When someone does anything, they like to throw s*t at it.

Doers are perpetually disliked by losers simply because they can do stuff while them can't.

It's natural that the losers' actions are aligned towards making doers disappear, but it's usually a very low level and pathetic threat to doers.

I enjoyed reading your article and hope you have more stuff coming :). Keep it going!


If you are going to be a doer - make sure to never give anyone else equity. Lest a private party with a liquid $20 billion creeps around the corner...

Zaleucus [0] from Locri wrote the first law system in the 7th century BC. Might be connected to what you have shared.

Today's Locri is in Calabria, a region in Italy that many consider infested with mafia-like organizations, which is of course sad, but also ironic.

[0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zaleucus


Once social trust (or assibiyah, to use Ibn Khandun's term) in a region collapses, it often returns slowly or not at all. Sadly common pattern in history. I think one could plausibly argue that in this way, Calabria never recovered from the collapse of antiquity, the Gothic wars, and generations spent as a Christian-Muslim war zone.

Love this. Make it into a chrome or Firefox extension, let people freely switch from "normal" to "honest" any time they want.


Wow, thanks a lot for a deep and insightful comment like this. I've learn quite a lot just by following your links. This is one of the reasons why I love HN and keep participating after all these years.


Thanks, that's very kind.



> What are we losing, what are we taking away from life, now that we ourselves have become a resource to extract. Probably, a lot.

Beautifully said. And sad.


Were they going to "move" Jakarta to a new location, because of climate change?


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