Polycarp Nakamoto priv/acc (@polycarpweb5) 's Twitter Profile
Polycarp Nakamoto priv/acc

@polycarpweb5

#Web5 is more open and decentralized. Where you own the hardware, software and data, with no user agreements or contracts. It is a layer 3 built on #bitcoin.

ID: 1516448320985743360

linkhttp://calltheoperator.org calendar_today19-04-2022 16:07:16

3,3K Tweet

1,1K Takipçi

2,2K Takip Edilen

Australian Bitcoin Industry Body (@ausbtcindbody) 's Twitter Profile Photo

It is important we address false and misleading statements. Bitcoin is not unsecured credit. It is not a promise to repay. it is bearer instrument. It is best understood as a commodity, valued for both its monetary & technological properties. It is hard money.

It is important we address false and misleading statements.

Bitcoin is not unsecured credit.

It is not a promise to repay.
it is bearer instrument.

It is best understood as a commodity, valued for both its monetary & technological properties.

It is hard money.
Bruce Fenton (@brucefenton) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I’m sorry I didn’t try harder to sell you on it earlier. It’s better money. The world is changing. It’s not too late. Dump the melting ice cube of phony fiat money and buy Bitcoin. It’s a really crazy idea. But it’s all we’ve got. It’s not as crazy as people sitting in

MetropleX | GrapheneOS | metroplex.bot (@metr0pl3x) 's Twitter Profile Photo

GrapheneOS is a fantastic foundation for using the technology closest to you in the most private way possible. Allowing users to best utilise those apps and services built with a privacy first approach.

Jameson Lopp (@lopp) 's Twitter Profile Photo

French police have proactively stopped a group of 10 men who were about to kidnap a crypto entrepreneur. x.com/Crypto__Goku/s…

CR1337 (@cryptonator1337) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Meta illegaly downloaded 80+ TB of books from LibGen and two other platforms to train their AI models while Aaron Swartz downloaded 70 GBs of articles in 2010 from JSTOR facing a $1 million fine and 35 years in jail before taking his own life in 2013. R.I.P. Legend

Meta illegaly downloaded 80+ TB of books from LibGen and two other platforms to train their AI models while Aaron Swartz downloaded 70 GBs of articles in 2010 from JSTOR facing a $1 million fine and 35 years in jail before taking his own life in 2013.

R.I.P. Legend
Polycarp Nakamoto priv/acc (@polycarpweb5) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I'm not a quantum expert. But when it comes to Bitcoin, there seems to be 2 camps. Camp one: We need to fork Bitcoin tomorrow. Camp 2: Bitcoin won't be threatened by Qday for at least 20 years. What's your take?

Wandering King (@wanderinking072) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Samourai motion to dismiss the case has just been released: storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.usco… Don't forget to donate: p2prights.org/donate.html

Samourai motion to dismiss the case has just been released:
storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.usco…

Don't forget to donate:
p2prights.org/donate.html
VLAD HOSTS THE BEST PODCAST IN BITCOIN (@thevladcostea) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Really powerful speech by Ross His metaphor with the bee hives & the story about prison factions should really make you think about our infighting. Bitcoiners have been baited into hating other blockchains & their users, then created purity tests to hate each other. Who wins?

nifty (btc++ atx may 7-9) (@niftynei) 's Twitter Profile Photo

in oslo, calle made a compelling argument that a post quantum bitcoin fork should burn any vulnerable P2PK/taproot coins; lowkey think it’d be poetic to put a 21y grace period on updating your coins (the biggest proof of keys bitcoin has ever seen) which then creates a

Sooraj Sathyanarayanan (@ianonymous3000) 's Twitter Profile Photo

You’re at a cafe. You see this QR code. It says “WiFi” - Free internet. Convenient. But here’s the problem: Anyone can print a QR code and leave it on the table. The moment you scan it, your phone might: - connect to a rogue network - leak your credentials - install malware -

You’re at a cafe. You see this QR code.

It says “WiFi” - Free internet. Convenient.

But here’s the problem:
Anyone can print a QR code and leave it on the table.

The moment you scan it, your phone might:
- connect to a rogue network
- leak your credentials
- install malware
-