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originally posted by: daskakik
a reply to: PurpleFox
I can't speak for anyone else but when I say "nothing is happening" in these threads I am specifically talking about the predictions made by Q or that the anons thought Q made through coded messages in the drops.
Outside that context something is always happening, obviously.
originally posted by: crankyoldman
Jesus Myth Inverted, what I did tell you the other day? Good Friday is April 7 = 47.
Why can't Bragg get to Brag about killing DJT? Charges against Trump won't be considered until next week
[...]
In a college classroom in the Indian city of Bangalore last August, Moiz Ahmed held up a volleyball-size chrome globe with a glass-covered opening at its center. Ahmed explained to the students that if they had their irises scanned with the device, known as the Orb, they would be rewarded with 25 Worldcoins, a soon-to-be released cryptocurrency. The scan, he said, was to make sure they hadn’t signed up before. That’s because Worldcoin, the company behind the project, wants to create the most widely and evenly distributed cryptocurrency ever by giving every person on the planet the same small allocation of coins.
Worldcoin CEO Alex Blania says the company’s technology could solve one of the Web’s thorniest problems—how to prevent fake identities from distorting online activity, without compromising people’s privacy. Potential applications include tackling fake profiles on social media, distributing a global universal basic income (UBI), and empowering new forms of digital democracy.
The founders envisaged Worldcoin as a global distribution network for universal basic income.
This week Sam Altman’s OpenAI released a new iteration of its viral product which replaces human functions with robots, while Worldcoin, another venture co-founded by Altman, launched a project that aims to make sure robots can’t impersonate humans.
Worldcoin, a project which aims to build digital identity via biometrics stored on-chain, on Tuesday launched World ID, a protocol that aims to provide tools for developers to prove that there is a real person behind a digital action. OpenAI, which developed the AI-powered chatbot ChatGPT, released a major upgrade, GPT-4, on the same day.
The Worldcoin project as a whole can be thought of in three parts, the World ID protocol, which went live in beta on Mar. 1, an unreleased Worldcoin token, which is rumored to be part of a basic income program, and an app, which can be used to buy, sell and send crypto, the worldcoin token, and conventional dollars.
Introducing World ID, a new privacy-first digital identity that brings global proof of personhood to the internet.
Digital identity has been an open problem since the invention of the internet. Even today, more than 50% of the world’s population doesn’t have a verifiable legal ID. As we venture into the exciting new Age of Artificial Intelligence, solving proof of personhood is more important than ever—specifically to ensure democratic access and governance of these systems, fairly distribute the benefits generated and know who and what to trust online.
originally posted by: socialmediaclown
OpenAI’s Sam Altman wants to convince billions of people to scan their eyes to prove they aren’t bots.
originally posted by: daskakik
These are Q threads so, yeah, I'm addressing the topic, the narrative laid out by Q.
JPMorgan is seizing on the rising popularity of biometrics technology, which uses unique body measurements to authenticate a person’s identity. The technology is expected to account for roughly $5.8 trillion in transactions and 3 billion users by 2026, JPMorgan said, citing Goode Intelligence.
The technology isn’t just for JPMorgan cardholders. Consumers will be able to link many different forms of payment to JPMorgan’s new system.
originally posted by: socialmediaclown
JPMorgan will let consumers pay with their face or palm instead of a card
JPMorgan is seizing on the rising popularity of biometrics technology, which uses unique body measurements to authenticate a person’s identity. The technology is expected to account for roughly $5.8 trillion in transactions and 3 billion users by 2026, JPMorgan said, citing Goode Intelligence.
The technology isn’t just for JPMorgan cardholders. Consumers will be able to link many different forms of payment to JPMorgan’s new system.
fortune.com...
originally posted by: nerbot
Please stop complaining.
You want to see some ACTION, keep an eye of FRANCE. Things are kicking off big time in just about every large town and city in the counrty with roadblocks and protests. This weekend is going to be HUGE. There is a Million Man March going on in Paris right now and it's only THURSDAY.
Lithium Valley is on track to become one of the world’s largest sources of lithium, the essential material for EV batteries – positioning California to be the global hub for battery production and a leader in securing a clean energy future.
3) To date I had not been able to decode why the 5 and 11 spaces, until your point in (1) above!
5 spaces, 93, 11 spaces, d (4th letter), k (11th letter) gives 59311411
A DuckduckGo search of "59311411" throws up, as TOP result:
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene/59311411:
mRNA-capping enzyme subunit beta [Fusarium subglutinans]
Pluto has yet to complete a single orbit around the sun since it was discovered 93 years ago. The planet will complete its first full orbit since its discovery on Monday, March 23rd, 2178.
As long as people aren't all coming in at the same time and demanding that their deposits back, you're okay, but that's exactly what's been happening," Prof. Stephan Weiler told Fortune. "So the chances of facing those unrealized losses are going up."
The problem, JPMorgan’s analysts led by Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou noted this week, is that $1 trillion in deposits were pulled from the “most vulnerable” U.S. banks after SVB’s collapse.
“So the chances of facing those unrealized losses are going up,” Weiler warned, and that could lead to more bank runs.
originally posted by: daskakik
originally posted by: igloo
I think a lot of the fun of this thread is the lateral thinking and pattern recognition. Some of us seem to enjoy that, larp or not. It's also the adventure, not just the destination.
Star for you.
One of my major points has always been that what you say is part of this is what most of what most of ATS is about (not including the general off-topic chitchat forums). This same lateral thinking and pattern recognition happens outside the Q threads but here it is almost like an offshoot of ATS skunk works, say anything and you don't have to back it up as long as you say you are with Q.
How about a little common courtesy? You want to speculate? Fine, but don't get offended if someone doesn't buy it because you are just speculating and can't back it up.