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curt finch
npub1twan...xjqh
on alby
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big curt 4 months ago
Good thought experiment. If we assume Satoshi was a woman, here are the stylistic elements in her writing that support the hypothesis: --- 1. Politeness & Indirectness Satoshi frequently used softening phrases: “It would be nice if…” “I think…” “Probably…” This hedging style is less common in male cypherpunk forums of the 1990s/2000s, which were often blunt, adversarial, or aggressively confident. Reads more like an academic or educator accustomed to consensus-building. --- 2. Teaching Tone Posts often read like a lesson plan: Concepts are broken into step-by-step explanations. Heavy use of analogies (gold, mining, signatures). Rare jargon dumps; instead, technical ideas are framed for a broad audience. This “explain don’t boast” tone is atypical of the macho hacker culture at the time, but common among educators—including female academics trying to open technical fields. --- 3. Community Orientation Satoshi avoided first-person bragging. Rarely wrote “I invented…”—instead, emphasized the system itself. Often shifted attention away from self toward “we” and “the network.” That rhetorical modesty contrasts with male contemporaries who often debated by asserting authority. --- 4. Absence of Ego/Conflict Style Cypherpunk lists were full of flame wars; Satoshi’s style was calm, measured, and non-confrontational. Example: when criticized, Satoshi responded with patient explanations rather than dominance or sarcasm. That conflict-avoidance and collaborative framing fits more with stereotypical female discourse patterns identified in sociolinguistics. --- 5. Careful Identity Management Satoshi wrote in an unusually neutral register—free of idioms, pop culture, or “tells.” Sociolinguists note this hyper-awareness of concealment is consistent with someone navigating a male-dominated space where being outed as female could undermine credibility. --- Bottom Line If Satoshi was a woman, the supporting stylistic traits are: Hedging & politeness instead of blunt authority. Teaching tone instead of hacker one-upmanship. Community-centered framing over personal credit. Calm, non-combative replies in a flame-heavy environment. Neutral, guarded identity presentation that could double as camouflage. --- Would you like me to pull a few direct Satoshi quotes that showcase these traits side by side with typical male cypherpunk posts, so the contrast is crystal clear?
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big curt 4 months ago
My four year old granddaughter has a towel for when she gets out of the bath that's got a hoodie built in I see kids with these shoes that you can turn into roller skates instantaneously Also a lot of them have these shoes that blink and flash when they run around like there's LEDs in there or something And I just got to say I'm f****** jealous We never had that s*** when I was a kid And except for the roller skates which I can't do cuz I'm an old crippled f*** everything else we should have as adults
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big curt 4 months ago
108k Buy now while supplies last!
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big curt 4 months ago
I love it when they deport people to the wrong country just cracks me up How F****** retarded is our government? I was talking to a Canadian lawyer yesterday and he said that they are adding trumpatility to the force majeure section of contracts 'if he changes his mind again then the contract is null' in other words Trumpatility=market volatility caused by the orange snollygaster F****** retard
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big curt 4 months ago
I have been involved in Bitcoin since we were all pedo drug terrorists Now we're president Oh wait nothing's changed
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big curt 4 months ago
At one point IBM became a blockchain company You're asking whether IBM is still doing anything with XLM (Stellar Lumens) nowadays. Here’s the clear, fact-based rundown: --- What IBM Has Done with XLM — and What’s Now Historical Involvement IBM’s major project with Stellar was World Wire (also called Blockchain World Wire), a real-time cross-border payments system built on the Stellar public blockchain. Launched around 2017–2018, World Wire used XLM as a bridge currency between fiat currencies in payments. IBM acted as a network operator and validator on Stellar, offering enterprise tools—like validation nodes and a “Universal Payment Solution”—on top of Stellar’s public network. It enabled stablecoin issuance by participating banks and reduced settlement times dramatically. What’s Happened Since IBM open-sourced much of the World Wire code around 2021, shifting toward offering these capabilities as service accelerators for clients rather than running the network themselves. There’s no recent evidence (post-2021) of IBM continuing active projects or new developments directly tied to XLM or Stellar. IBM now seems more focused on broader blockchain services and enterprise blockchain, rather than advancing Stellar-specific products. --- Bottom Line Past involvement? Definitely. IBM built and operated World Wire using Stellar and XLM. Current activity? As of now, there’s no indication IBM is actively working with XLM. Everything points to their engagement winding down in the early 2020s. --- Let me know if you want a peek at IBM's current blockchain roadmap or alternatives in enterprise crypto rails—I can dig deeper, skip the fluff, and keep it tight.
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big curt 4 months ago
BNB is binance coin right? How is that different than just buying the stock in the binance company?
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big curt 4 months ago
At night I fall into slumber and often my last thoughts are the excitement I feel at the coffee I will have in the morning We have perfected the art of the perfect coffee