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Howdy there, partner! Welcome on into the Stacker Saloon.

Saddle on up to a stool and spill the beans about your day, fire away with them questions, or let loose and give us the lowdown on your wild and woolly life. We're all ears, so don't hold back!

We're open round the clock, so mosey on in whenever you please!

1 sat \ 3 replies \ @k00b 20h

I've been wanting to research and write something on how nonprofits neuter revolutions. I'm pretty sure I'll wind up looking like the guy trying to stop the money helicopters from making everyone rich and happy though.

The best I can think of is writing around the topic. I will make it about all the other subcultures' nonprofits.

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1 sat \ 2 replies \ @k00b 19h
Are we the oak tree or are we the mistle­toe? Do we want to feed off of a strong and solid industry, like the mistletoe that grows on the oak? Do we want to set our limits around negotiating contracts? Or do we want to build a self-sustaining movement through our own institutions?

Cesar Chavez, according to this essay, was turned away from a mission of self-determination, mutual-aid institutions, and coop­erative work/living for farmworkers when he started a nonprofit and was redirected by private donors to support mere unionization.

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The essay describes a sequence of events or correlation, but doesn't even try to establish causality. Maybe it's just a difficult problem, and Chavez tried different things when they hit walls?

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1 sat \ 0 replies \ @k00b 18h

I liked the quote - it’s not a perfect essay. There’s no laboratory for testing these things. Real life outcomes are overdetermined. But, if you take enough before then after diffs, you can establish a kind of cultural epidemiology imo.

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new moon

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Damn, how many slop bots are there? Seems like we get a new one every day. Or, is it the same accounts, changing their nyms all the time?

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1 sat \ 0 replies \ @k00b 21h

a few new ones each day by my count. why read and write when you can run a computer that trys to fool people that read and write.

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What do you think the word is, stackers?

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Haven't tried P yet

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Wasn't P

Was what I tried first, but PUBES wasn't a word in the list apparently.

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Lame, I assume it was "lubes" then

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It was LUBES. I just thought most of the letters I thought of trying were funny. Including B

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I tried to make B work as well

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169 sats \ 3 replies \ @k00b 18 Mar

#1456648 implies two features:

  1. the ability to recognize an invoice in the editor and allow paying the invoice using attached wallets (without the need for proxying/fees ... because they are revealing their pubkey anyway)
  2. post types that allow pooling of money for a bounty/contest

This is a reminder to self. These have come up a lot over the years, along with sending money to someone via their profile, but have always been deprioritized as last-mile zap-like things.

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post types that allow pooling of money for a bounty/contest

Should I be getting my hopes up?

First Firefly comes back and now this! What a week!

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45 sats \ 1 reply \ @k00b 18 Mar
Should I be getting my hopes up?

Not yet. We have too many plates spinning UX-wise, but once that's settled, this kind of thing is quick work now.

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Cool. I've got a SNIP that I've been meaning to write up. Hopefully that will also be quick work, should it be accepted.

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114th Cowboy Plunda Drop in the @saloon

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Use that fancy LN wallet you got and login into plunda.co and git you some loot! Get a shot at some coins🪙 Box of loot🎁 or an arcade token!

Use the below voucher code to collect!
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Got questions? Reach out to the sheriff @plunda

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Coin of the Day:

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You tend to find and share interesting and relevant websites and time wasters!

Much appreciated!

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Hahahahaha

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68 sats \ 0 replies \ @gmd 18 Mar

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BTC BELOW 100K: PLEB AID
Offer spotlight: Seedor
Gift Cards 8% off!

The Seedor Safe enables an independent and permanent backup of your Bitcoin Recovery Seed Phrase in extremely resistant stainless steel. Made in Germany.

Get yours:
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congrats. who'd you win with

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Augustus, science victory on shattered seas map.

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Entirely predictable, their DeFi positioning made it clear the goal was always to be a degenerate wallet

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One of the best things I did in 2025 was start making my own sourdough 🤠

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132 sats \ 0 replies \ @AliceA 18 Mar

Hi stackers, please check out my post:

How babies are born into sovereign families
#1456325

I would love to have a community discourse. 💌
Shout out to bitcoin beans cacao for fueling me during the writing process. 🍫☕npub1jx702fwvkdtqkhd9p8n6ctgnycpl6whsx07a0h9s9h2hlgx6q60svk2c49

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what... oh...

i shud meme the house into existence; 😏

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1 sat \ 1 reply \ @DarthCoin 18 Mar -2 sats

what have to do this meme with me? Why do you called me?

#include <ratio>
test 


fuck around std::deci


I want to make use of the CODE BLOCKS or INLINE CODE on text the editor.

in this example from @optimism it has all the different colors:
#1450271

why is mine so plain? what am I doing wrong?

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#include <ratio>
test

fuck aroudn std::deci

Use triple backticks with a language indicator:

```cpp
#include <ratio>
test

fuck aroudn std::deci
```
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I had the trip back ticks, but added cpp
it has now been edited and looks legit
Thanks!

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This article from Alvaro Di María is exactly what happening with the Economist in Argentina. Even Milei (although he once mentioned the powerfull value against politicians).

Why Economists Are the Ones Who Understand Bitcoin the Least

“There is no choice but to admit that opinions about money are harder to pin down than clouds deformed by the wind.”
—J. A. Schumpeter, History of Economic Analysis

I often share a meme that reads: “Economists have the worst understanding of Bitcoin. Change my mind.” Over and over again, I find this to be true. Economists, as a group, consistently have the poorest grasp of Bitcoin. And it doesn't matter what school they come from, whether they’re professors or banking executives, whether they lean left or right, whether they follow the Austrian School or Modern Monetary Theory. After four years immersed in Bitcoin —conducting hundreds of interviews, attending conferences, and participating in debates— I can count on one hand the economists who truly understand it.

Bitcoin Challenges Beliefs
Bitcoin confronts deeply held beliefs, and as Ortega y Gasset observed, we are held by our beliefs, we interpret the world through them and instinctively reject ideas that contradict them.

What’s Wrong with Economists?
Undoubtedly, Bitcoin operates in the economic realm —though not only there— so how is it possible that something so economically significant could go unnoticed or misunderstood by economic theorists?
“It’s a bubble! Just digital tulips!” they say, ignoring the fact that while tulips went up 22-fold, Bitcoin has increased over 60 million times. “That can’t be right,” they think, “the market must be wrong.” But what are they missing?
Bitcoin solves a set of long-standing problems in the digital world. In the digital realm, we lack privacy by default, because every interaction requires a service provider. Privacy means the ability to reveal oneself selectively, but this becomes impossible if you're forced to share your data with someone who can betray your trust.
If you hand someone a letter, the contents remain private. If you send an email, that privacy depends entirely on the provider, who can access or leak the contents. The same is true with physical cash; when you pay with a banknote, the shopkeeper doesn’t know who you are, nor does the central bank know what you bought, where, or when. But in digital transactions, that anonymity disappears. Your bank knows everything, and that data can spread far beyond.

Electronic Cash
Bitcoin, as described by Satoshi in the whitepaper, is “electronic cash.” However, this phrase has led to a series of mistaken assumptions, assumptions that are at the core of why economists fail to grasp Bitcoin. It’s not, as Saifedean Ammous suggests in The Bitcoin Standard, merely a better alternative to fiat or central banking. The misunderstanding goes deeper.
Bitcoin solves two core problems in the digital world: the double-spending problem, and the trusted third-party problem.
In the digital space, duplication is easy and nearly free. You can send the same image to ten people at once. That ability to replicate means digital items can’t be scarce or worth storing.

The Trusted Third Party
Moreover, to prevent this duplication from corrupting a monetary system, a third party is typically used to ensure that a transaction happens only once. Just as streaming platforms prevent you from endlessly sharing content, banks prevent digital money from being “double-spent.” But this introduces massive dependencies and risks: loss of privacy, censorship, reliance on the provider’s competence, exposure to attacks, regulatory compliance, and the risk of collapse or state seizure.

The Breakthrough: Solving Double Spending Without Trust
Bitcoin is the first and only digital asset to solve both double spending and third-party dependency, making it the world’s first truly digital, real asset, a digital commodity. Yes, Bitcoin is a real asset. It is nobody’s liability. It has no issuer, no company managing it, no one generating value on its behalf. Recognizing Bitcoin as a real asset is the first stumbling block for economists.

The second difficulty is understanding its role relative to payment systems. Bitcoin is not a great payment method, not due to technical limitations, but because that’s not what it’s designed for. Most of us already have easy ways to pay for things, so its use in day-to-day payments isn’t especially compelling. On top of that, it increases transaction costs —as Ronald Coase would note— for regular payments. And since its supply is fixed, any change in demand reflects directly in the price. There is no way to adjust supply to stabilize it, so Bitcoin is inherently volatile.

Payments and units of account require stability to enable economic calculation. But stability comes at the cost of long-term asset appreciation. So what value does Bitcoin actually offer?

A Redefinition of Property Rights
The most important thing Bitcoin does is redefine property rights. Until now, property has always depended on systems upheld by coercive power. Bitcoin removes the need for a trusted third party and creates a global, autonomous system where people can own and transfer control of a real asset, digitally. In this way, Bitcoin functions as a global system of absolute private property rights.

This is a historical shift. Ownership becomes dependent not on institutions or governments but on knowledge, knowing a set of words. For the first time, people anywhere in the world can own assets, store value, and pass on wealth privately, without censorship, and without dilution, with unprecedented accessibility.
That’s no small feat.

Deterioration, Divisibility, and Custody Costs
If Bitcoin is a real asset, then its value depends on the demand for the properties it possesses. Since it’s not anyone’s liability, it cannot be censored or easily confiscated. It also drastically reduces the cost of saving and transferring value over time.

Its deterministic supply schedule, which is essentially deflationary due to lost coins, means your share of the total supply grows over time. There's no risk of dilution, and your wealth concentration increases naturally.
Moreover, Bitcoin avoids the information asymmetry involved in choosing where to invest. It's like buying gold, you don’t have to pick the right company or fund. But unlike gold, Bitcoin is easy to divide, verify, and transport. Gold is costly to store, verify, and protect. It deteriorates slightly each year through dilution—about 1.6 to 2%. Over time, that’s significant.

Real estate has similar issues. It deteriorates, has high custody and maintenance costs, carries legal and regulatory risks, and is difficult to liquidate. Bitcoin doesn’t have those problems. It’s durable, portable, divisible, and not subject to location-based taxation or expropriation in the same way.

Bitcoin’s Superior Design
Compared with traditional “store of value” assets, Bitcoin’s design is superior in nearly every way. It is built for hoarding, not spending. With a fixed supply, it gains value the more people want to save it, not spend it. And as a real asset, it carries no counterparty risk. It doesn’t need to be “backed” by anything, and it cannot default.
Ask yourself: What are the odds that states will stop devaluing their currencies? What are the chances that regulation will loosen in the coming years? What’s the likelihood that taxes on illiquid assets like property won’t increase? Will politicians leave private pension funds untouched? Have banks ever failed to return depositors’ money? Have states or companies ever defaulted?
Bitcoin may not answer all these questions, but it changes the context in which we ask them.

Economists Must Do Their Homework
Economists still haven’t done the necessary work. The task is not to interpret Bitcoin through the lens of existing theories or beliefs, but to rethink those theories and beliefs in light of Bitcoin.

That’s where the work begins.

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For online services, is there a fundamental tension between openness and permissionless-ness, and exploitability by bots?

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well, I thought I was going to do a bunch of stuff this morning, but now I'm just going to do this:

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I put it on in the background and I thought a lot was reasonable, until Jon asked about datum being open source. You do not make promises to open source your software, you do not "intend to". You either do it or you do not.

So... now I think it's all just some dumb ass thing. Also, the guy that did the only BIP-110 signal is a smart guy. Does he know what he signaled from? Or did someone on the team downplay what the BIP does?

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I'm more around 3/4 way through. I agree that Bob seems pretty smart (as does Atack).

Bob said two things that may be relevant:

  1. He said that he signaled for many reasons, one of which was to remind people what it means to be a miner (not just a hasher). He said: when you are a miner and making your own templates you can signal, you can choose the transactions.
  2. There was some discussion of spam, and clearly Bob doesn't like it. This was tied to a conversation about whether filtering is censorship (I think it was Bob who said at one point that it wasn't censorship because he "didn't know who's transactions it was" and that it's more truly censorship when you target an individual, not a type). I wish they had gotten around to how filtering can seem a little like removing the neutrality from bitcoin, though. In my mind, filtering is entirely the choice of any miner or node, but it seems like it could just as easily be used to "filter" monetary transactions as it can (and is) used to filter technically repugnant transactions. I would have interested in listening to both of them explain how we will adopt filters to weed out transactions that "aren't monetary" but how we will also never do the same to "monetary" transactions.
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I do think the "type" vs. "who" distinction is meaningful. that's a good argument

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So he's going to fork off then. After all, he signaled that he would. The 0x10 bit literally means "come September I am forking off even if everyone agrees to not do it". It's what the code says. Does he understand this? Because there is no walking back from that, not without being a signal saboteur. And sticking to it may be really, really dumb.

It sounds like the man sits in an echo chamber. And for someone that admits to being too old to have any runway left, maybe we should do him a favor and get him on SN. To at least also see the other perspectives on this.

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Howdy gents! Today I'm handling some home administrative chores: cleaning, bills, spring de-cluttering, etc. Hope you all having a great day!

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1 sat \ 1 reply \ @AG 18 Mar

#1455854 Delegation That Actually Scales: A Playbook for Entrepreneurs

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Thanks for the tag. These are things I like to do myself.

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#1456301


💀☣💀☣💀

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10 sats \ 0 replies \ @anon 19 Mar

LA, what a shit hole.

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I'm further north but it was 50F yesterday and I was so pleased. First day in weeks when I could go outside without long underwear. Fuck winter, fuck snow! I'm so over it.

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I am so curious about why some people are born in a wealthy family and others were born in a low income family

Half day off of work!