“Died as she lived: contaminated by more disease than a feral rat in a New York City subway”
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neatchee@lemmy.worldto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•It would have been really funny if a video game ejected the disk if you lost too many times
18·7 months agoTbh it would be absolutely fantastic if a game pulled this off today.
“Did…did this game just burn itself to a DVD-R before wiping itself from my drive? Where did it even get a DVD-R from??? Wait a sec, my PC didn’t even have a DVD drive before today! Why is there a charge to PCRepairGuy on my credit card?! WHAT IS HAPPENING?!?”
neatchee@lemmy.worldto
No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Are the character names in most Anime real Japanese names or just made up?
1·7 months agoOof. Well called out. I feel terrible. Removing
neatchee@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•A quick reminder, 2025 update should include AI in the diagram
3·7 months agoYup, that’s pretty much it.
And you’re exactly correct: it is a niche solution to a very specific problem.
And that makes the OP meme wrong and ignorant; an overly broad generalization that fails to educate, instead perpetuating a “crypto bad” mentality projected onto a useful piece of tech.
It’s like saying “when do you need nuclear fission? Never” ignoring the fact that nuclear power is the perfect solution for some very specific use cases (like powering rovers on Mars) and a good solution to a few others (large scale terrestrial power generation)
neatchee@lemmy.worldto
No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Are the character names in most Anime real Japanese names or just made up?
6·7 months agoIf you’re talking about something like MHA those are largely made up with some influence from real naming patterns.
For what it’s worth a quick Google search will usually tell you the answer for any particular name. Just like with English, there’s a combination of:
- Names that are also real words still in use (“Sakura” or “Rose”)
- Names that are based on former vocations (“Goldstein” or “Smith”)
- Stuff that’s meant to remind you of something related to the character (“Otto Octavius”)
- Whatever the author felt sounded cool (“Ronan Dex”)
neatchee@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•A quick reminder, 2025 update should include AI in the diagram
2·7 months agoRight, but if it’s being used internally within an organization then the business itself is the authority. I think I mentioned this in another reply somewhere but in many of these use cases it’s about preventing tampering or falsification of records.
Let’s take the pharmaceuticals use case as an example. In that scenario the important things to track are:
- When did a product come off the production line
- Who or what system handled the packing and shipment
- When was it shipped
- When was it received
- Who received it
- When does it expire
- When was a specific item provided to a patient
- Has a participant had their permissions revoked
If the pharmaceutical company is the one managing that system, and they provide individual health care facilities (and any intermediate handles) with “private keys”, that’s the entire extent of the central authority that’s required. Literally every other element can be encoded on the blockchain.
Compare that to a traditional system where you have to maintain databases, provide always-on connectivity to those databases for every participant, manage access control permissions for every user, etc etc etc
With blockchain, every participant can get the entirety of what they need with just their “private key” and a copy of the blockchain from one other peer. That’s it. They can submit their blocks (for a leaf node, “I received this package”; “I gave the item to this patient”; etc) to that one peer and as long as there is a path through that peer to the distributed network, the rest of the network can authenticate the validity of those blocks through network consensus. Tampering is immediately evident. And every block they submit is traceable to whoever that private key was issued to. And once they submit a block to the chain it can never be undone or modified, even if they have all the “permissions” in the world. They’d have to take over a massive percent of the distributed network to alter consensus.
neatchee@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•A quick reminder, 2025 update should include AI in the diagram
1·7 months agoYou’ve misunderstood. They’re not using this for inter-bank transfers. They’re using it for inter-branch/intra-bank communication. And most major banks - certainly the ones investing in blockchain - have hundreds to thousands of branches.
Not to mention signing+encryption and blockchain are not mutually exclusive. You can have signed and encrypted blocks on a chain
neatchee@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•A quick reminder, 2025 update should include AI in the diagram
2·7 months agoI don’t mean to be rude but it sounds like you aren’t very familiar with digital identity management paradigms in the first place?
Proving who you are is always a relative operation. It’s always about the relationship between two things. “I am the person who generated this other message” or “I am the person whose face looks like this”.
Key/certificate issuance follows a variety of different models depending on the use case. Sometimes “this object was generated/signed by the person who controls this key” is enough, as is the case with things like secure emails (think gpg/pgp). Other times you need an authority to give relative meaning to a key/certificate (think SSL).
neatchee@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•A quick reminder, 2025 update should include AI in the diagram
4·7 months agoIt’s certainly not necessary, it just provides specific advantages in terms of tamper resistance, validation, etc. If you’re not working in a system where the integrity and authenticity is paramount and doing that validation over the wire constantly is prohibitive then there’s no significant benefit. But there are lots of scenarios where those are EXACTLY what you want to prioritize. Several of the examples I added to my initial reply offer clear use cases that benefit.
As for my definition, I’ll defer to the literal definition:
A blockchain is a decentralized, immutable digital ledger that records transactions chronologically in “blocks” linked together using cryptography. Each new block contains a hash of the previous one, forming a secure chain that is distributed across a peer-to-peer network of computers, making it tamper-evident and resistant to changes without network consensus. This distributed and transparent system eliminates the need for a central authority, allowing participants to verify and trust the recorded data.
Note that proof of work is NOT part of the definition. Proof of work is very specifically related to cryptocurrency, and exists only as a mechanism to prevent the arbitrary creation of additional currency (blocks). There is nothing about blockchain that requires proof of work. Often you use proof of stake instead of proof of work, but even that isn’t strictly necessary
P.s. this is exactly what I mean when I talk about how grifters have ruined a perfectly good technology by poisoning the public awareness of it. The fact that you considered proof of work to be a core element of blockchain is because of cryptocurrency, and the notoriety it has received because of the grift. Other examples of this phenomenon include Tesla and their impact on the perception of autonomous vehicles (which Teslas are not, but try very hard to make you think they are), and LLMs and “AI” and their impact on the perception of real AI projects and other forms of machine learning.
neatchee@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•A quick reminder, 2025 update should include AI in the diagram
3·7 months agoSure but when the Blockchain is restricted to operation within a specific ecosystem that is kinda moot, no? Like, if I’m managing a supply chain but have concerns about the participants in that supply chain being compromised, then it’s okay for me as a central authority to define the standard and then use the decentralized nature of Blockchain to validate and distribute the use cases for that standard.
Take a company like Target as an example. They want to make sure that their supply chain ledger is immutable and trustworthy. They don’t want anyone within their organization, from the CEO down to the shipping dock workers, to be able to falsify or tamper with line items in the ledger. As a central authority they can define a standard using Blockchain that solves that problem AND doesn’t depend on a central authority to do it beyond the initial standard definition. That reduces attack surface significantly.
neatchee@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•A quick reminder, 2025 update should include AI in the diagram
2·7 months agoBlockchain itself is just, at its core, a method of cryptographically proving the authenticity of a ledger history. That’s it. What you DO with that technology is fairly boundless. You can embed anything in a block on the chain. We have lots of existing ways to handle proof of identity that can be inserted into a block (imagine if blocks contained the public key of block’s creator and then the entire block (including the public key) is signed with the private key)
neatchee@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•A quick reminder, 2025 update should include AI in the diagram
31·7 months agoUsing Blockchain in these situations provides clear advantages. The whole point is removing the need for trusted parties in yes scenarios because it introduced significant risk. Centralization has implicit dangers.
neatchee@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•A quick reminder, 2025 update should include AI in the diagram
62·7 months agoSure do! Quoting my other reply:
Immutable ledger for inter-branch bank transaction synchronization.
This is already in use at multiple financial institutions with significant value. It has increased the speed at which transactions can be verified and distributed across large networks of bank branches so that, for example, when you deposit your money at one bank branch it becomes available elsewhere on the network immediately without waiting for the end-of-day ledger reconciling. Previously, banks had to send just the transaction details and trust that it would be valid during reconciling (the “pending” status).
Want some more?
EDIT: Took the liberty of adding a bunch of examples to my original reply 👍
neatchee@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•A quick reminder, 2025 update should include AI in the diagram
43·7 months agoImmutable ledger for inter-branch bank transaction synchronization.
This is already in use at multiple financial institutions with significant value. It has increased the speed at which transactions can be verified and distributed across large networks of bank branches so that, for example, when you deposit your money at one bank branch it becomes available elsewhere on the network immediately without waiting for the end-of-day ledger reconciling. Previously, banks had to send just the transaction details and trust that it would be valid during reconciling (the “pending” status).
Want some more?
EDIT: Went ahead and added several examples to my original reply. 👍
neatchee@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•A quick reminder, 2025 update should include AI in the diagram
63·7 months agoThis is just plain wrong. Blockchain is not a synonym for cryptocurrency or proof-of-work.
Grifters ruin everything and this reply is a perfect example
neatchee@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•A quick reminder, 2025 update should include AI in the diagram
1211·7 months agoI hate this so much because it’s absolutely false. Nobody needs cryptocurrency. But Blockchain has very real value that has nothing to do with currency, grift, or “proof of work”. Blockchain is NOT synonymous with crypto and the fact that everyone believes it is shows exactly how much damage the grifters have done :(
EDIT: Haters gonna hate. Hope everyone who down-votes reads the replies too.
EDIT 2: Here you go, everybody. I did the research for you…
Supply chain management
- Food safety: Companies like Walmart and IBM Food Trust use blockchain to track food products from their source to the store shelf. This allows for a swift, precise response to contamination by tracing affected items, potentially saving lives and reducing waste.
- Logistics and shipping: Shipping giant Maersk has partnered with IBM to create TradeLens, a blockchain platform that digitizes and automates shipping documents and processes. This increases transparency and efficiency across the global supply chain.
Healthcare and medical records
- Secure data sharing: Blockchain can create a secure, interoperable system for storing and sharing patient medical records. Patients can use private keys to control who accesses their sensitive data, ensuring privacy while allowing authorized providers to get the information they need.
- Pharmaceutical tracking: The MediLedger Project uses blockchain to secure the pharmaceutical supply chain, verifying the integrity of drugs and reducing the risk of counterfeit medications.
- Clinical trial management: Platforms like TrialSite use blockchain to record clinical trial data securely and transparently. This helps maintain the integrity of results, building greater trust among researchers, regulators, and participants.
Government and public services
- Land and property records: The government of Georgia has used blockchain to secure land and property records, creating an immutable and transparent public record. This reduces fraud and ensures the integrity of land titles.
- Voting systems: The mobile voting platform Voatz uses a blockchain-based system to enable secure, transparent mobile voting for eligible service members and travelers abroad. This provides a resilient solution against fraud and data corruption.
Finance (non-crypto) and banking
- Efficient transaction processing: Financial institutions like the Singapore Exchange Limited are using blockchain to streamline interbank payments. This reduces manual reconciliation and enables more efficient processing of thousands of transactions.
- Supply chain finance: TradeIX uses blockchain to provide a transparent platform for supply chain finance, automating processes and streamlining transactions.
Education
- Credential verification: Learning Machine uses blockchain for the secure issuance of digital diplomas and credentials. This provides a more trustworthy and efficient method for verifying academic achievements.
Intellectual property and media
- Transparent ticketing: Companies like Guts use blockchain to create a transparent ticketing ecosystem that eliminates ticket fraud and the secondary ticket market.
Energy and utilities
- Peer-to-peer energy trading: Homeowners with solar panels can use blockchain-based platforms to automatically sell their excess energy to neighbors. Smart meters record the transactions on a blockchain, automating the entire process.
neatchee@lemmy.worldOPto
Desire Paths@sh.itjust.works•"Desire for Sidewalks" or "Desire to Avoid Vehicle Impact Death"
1·8 months agoYes, that’s why I still participate in grassroots campaigning. I even have an idea that has been incubating among myself and a select few friends and former colleagues on how to tackle this. But we’ve yet to find the last two things we need: a political finance expert and a constitutional lawyer, both willing to stick their necks out to passionately disrupt the very industries in which they thrive
neatchee@lemmy.worldOPto
Desire Paths@sh.itjust.works•"Desire for Sidewalks" or "Desire to Avoid Vehicle Impact Death"
2·8 months agoAbsolutely not. This is like how they want people to believe climate change can be stopped my everyone compostin, when something like 60%+ of emissions come from 10 known polluters
Democratizing blame is a tactic of manipulators to avoid accountability.
As I said, fault and responsibility are different.
It is clear who is at fault. And it is clear we are responsible for purging the societal parasites.
We can talk about improving future mitigation against abuse, but victim blaming under the pretention of “cultural responsibility” is bullshit. America’s car-centric culture is demonstrably NOT a naturally occuring phenomenon like bigotry but a deliberately manufactured environment for the benefit of moneyed interests




I hear what you’re trying to say, but the old “if it’s not true then why do you care” line is honestly bullshit. Like, we live in a world where money can buy airtime and airtime can drastically influence the ignorant. It’s why FOX News is such a problem.
Don’t get me wrong, Drake is a total pedophile and deserves to lose this. And he should’ve known better than to bring the suit because it’s so obvious he was gonna lose.
But that doesn’t make your argument accurate.