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unwoundmouse commented on PayPal’s Objectionable Terms Are Back, $2500 Fines for Content They Don’t Like   viewfromthewing.com/paypa... · Posted by u/that
delusional · 3 years ago
"The fed" doesn't approve chargebacks.
unwoundmouse · 3 years ago
at a deeper level it does

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unwoundmouse commented on PayPal’s Objectionable Terms Are Back, $2500 Fines for Content They Don’t Like   viewfromthewing.com/paypa... · Posted by u/that
ZetaZero · 3 years ago
How will Bitcoin fix it? If I buy a video card with bitcoin, but get sent a brick instead, how does "Blockchain as Arbiter" get my bitcoins back?
unwoundmouse · 3 years ago
lets you decide who to trust to have the power to approve chargebacks instead of defacto trusting the fed
unwoundmouse commented on PayPal’s Objectionable Terms Are Back, $2500 Fines for Content They Don’t Like   viewfromthewing.com/paypa... · Posted by u/that
mgamache · 3 years ago
God I hate to say it, but Bitcoin fixes this (with the Lightning Network). https://lightning.network/

I am not a Maxi, but Jesus what other options are there?

unwoundmouse · 3 years ago
zelle v̶e̶n̶m̶o̶ cashapp revolut ach wire ...

and if you're concerned about centralization

ethereum solana cosmos avalanche fantom monero aptos polygon ...

unwoundmouse commented on Decipad – Like Notion with problem-solving capabilities   decipad.com... · Posted by u/g-camargo
unwoundmouse · 3 years ago
What did you use for UI, is this tailwind? looks really clean
unwoundmouse commented on Software engineers paying 75K to get 3 inches taller   businessinsider.com/tech-... · Posted by u/thelastgallon
armatav · 3 years ago
I haven't done this particular bone surgery, but I had my jaws broken and moved forward (sleep apnea) - not painful at all if you have a good surgeon. And in this case, they're moving it bit-by-bit over a long period of time.

I imagine some physical therapy and you're all good - the nerves can stretch just fine.

Plus, if you know the risks, and you want to be taller - go for it. One life, spend it how you wish.

unwoundmouse · 3 years ago
this take is actually kind of neat
unwoundmouse commented on Parents’ trauma leaves biological traces in children   scientificamerican.com/ar... · Posted by u/CharlesW
1970-01-01 · 4 years ago
I can imagine the next Prop 65 warnings for Hollywood:

WARNING: This movie contains scary trigger scenes known to the State of California to cause birth defects or other reproductive harm.

unwoundmouse · 4 years ago
that would actually be pretty interesting lol
unwoundmouse commented on New Capabilities for GPT-3: Edit and Insert   openai.com/blog/gpt-3-edi... · Posted by u/todsacerdoti
jarbus · 4 years ago
Does anyone actually use Copilot for their work? I can't imagine it's anywhere near as reliable as OpenAI claims. I'd imagine a user would spend more time fixing mistakes or re-trying with different queries than they'd actually save.
unwoundmouse · 4 years ago
I use copilot, it's much more useful than you'd expect. Really helpful for places where you would normally need to record a small macro, copilot can infer the completions easily
unwoundmouse commented on I automated my job over a year ago and haven't told anyone   old.reddit.com/r/antiwork... · Posted by u/TriNetra
bubblecheck · 4 years ago
Points taken. However, at a minimum, it is a reasonable professional courtesy to disclose the significance of the backup issue upon exit.

The company did not mistreat the employee, just that it undervalued the employee.

unwoundmouse · 4 years ago
I think the question boils down to do you believe the employee is obligated to disclose the backup issue within the responsibility of the employment contract? I would say no, since the entire creation of the software was not within the responsibility of the contract, why would the documentation of the backup issue be within it?

I think the situation is analogous to the company giving the employee a big unwarranted pay raise, and then the employee lazily not doing more work, then the company firing the employee, but then arguing that at a minimum, the company has a reasonable professional courtesy to give the employee hours for their vacation days, even though it isn't specified within the contract.

u/unwoundmouse

KarmaCake day153September 17, 2019
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