Flibusteiro

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Flibusteiro

Flibusteiro

@flibusteiro124

Ubatuba, Brazil Katılım Ağustos 2025
151 Takip Edilen70 Takipçiler
BSV Social Impact
BSV Social Impact@bsvsimp·
Dr Craig is pushing 60 but is writing more papers, books and code in a single week now than during the previous 56 years of his life combined! 👏😙
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BSV Social Impact
BSV Social Impact@bsvsimp·
Dr Craig using the correct spelling of Bit Coin (Bit Coin) in 2011 😊
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Flibusteiro
Flibusteiro@flibusteiro124·
@bsvsimp @ComedyLond @CsTominaga Dr. Craig and Mr. Ayre from Antigua saved many children in Latin America which is why the cabal fights so hard to destroy peer-to-peer eletronic cash
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BSV Social Impact
BSV Social Impact@bsvsimp·
@ComedyLond @CsTominaga Ah yes Dr Craig leading special operations "jawbreaker" teams in the south American jungles Here he is applying an icepack to a fresh gunshot wound 😊
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RadioGenoa
RadioGenoa@RadioGenoa·
Goat beauty contest in Pakistan.
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Flibusteiro retweetledi
S Tominaga (Aka Dr Craig Wright)
The internet is decentralised, and not because some solemn little committee keeps a sacred repository of approved code under lock and key. TCP/IP is not a software implementation masquerading as a constitution. It is a published protocol. The rules are written down; the code is not ordained. Microsoft writes one stack, Apple another, Linux another, and yet they all communicate perfectly well. They do not require a TCP Core, an Internet Foundation, or a priesthood of developers to tell them what the protocol means this week. That is decentralisation. The protocol exists independently of any particular implementation. Anyone may write the software, provided the software follows the rules. No central group owns the standard by owning the dominant codebase. No foundation quietly changes the meaning of the system and then declares the alteration to be consensus. BTC Core and the Ethereum Foundation are often called decentralised because the word is fashionable and, like most fashionable words, rarely examined. But when a small group controls the reference implementation, changes the rules and determines what everyone else must follow, the system is not decentralised merely because the servers are scattered across the globe. A monarchy does not become a republic simply because the courtiers work from home. The internet works because the protocol is public, stable and independent of the implementations beneath it. Windows, Apple and Linux do not need to share code. They need only share rules. That is the difference. Truly decentralised systems fix the protocol and allow implementations to compete. Centralised systems fix the implementation and allow everyone else to pretend they are free. And, most importantly, genuinely decentralised protocols do not fuck around with the rules whenever the custodians grow bored.
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Flibusteiro
Flibusteiro@flibusteiro124·
@Favian_Kim how I sleep knowing Dr. Craig has got me covered
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𝓟𝓪𝓬 🥒
𝓟𝓪𝓬 🥒@PacArtCollect·
BSV — no one gets to define what is spam. BSV is for EVERYONE.
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𝓟𝓪𝓬 🥒
𝓟𝓪𝓬 🥒@PacArtCollect·
A global system does not want low volume/high fees. It wants high volume/low fees. $BSV
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Flibusteiro
Flibusteiro@flibusteiro124·
@MDBitcoin BSV is always there once you wake up
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MDB
MDB@MDBitcoin·
Bitcoin infighting makes me lose a little faith in humanity. Since 2018, I have held Bitcoiners to a higher standard than most people. Not because we were perfect, but because I believed we shared something deeper than price. -Proof of work. -Personal responsibility. -Truth over popularity. -Long-term thinking. -Sovereignty. The willingness to stand alone when the crowd was wrong. I thought those values would make us harder to divide. Instead, the infighting has reminded me that Bitcoiners are still human. We are still vulnerable to ego, status, fear, tribalism, social pressure, and the need to be seen as right. Maybe that is the real psyop. Not to attack Bitcoin directly, but to turn the people defending it against one another. To make every disagreement feel existential. To turn nuance into betrayal. To replace honest debate with factions, purity tests, and personal destruction. Maybe our responsibility is to become more like the thing we claim to understand. Less reactive and obsessed with winning social battles. More committed to truth, patience, and proof of work. Bitcoin may be incorruptible. Humans are not. That is why the human layer remains the easiest layer to attack.
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vellegno
vellegno@vellegno·
@Kruwed @Vladcostea ETH would have been built on Bitcoin if Palm Beach Pete hadn’t bribed core devs to cripple scripting and keep the floppy disk block size.
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VLAD HOSTS THE BEST PODCAST IN BITCOIN
The most important question for which we will have to find an answer in the coming year is: Will Bitcoin become the money that does everything from payments to expressive smart contracts to fulfill the maximalist thesis Or was Bitcoin just the first prototype, an early blueprint that leads to better and more efficient internet money?
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Flibusteiro
Flibusteiro@flibusteiro124·
@EntangleITcom lmao imagine the guy who paid 10 bands for an username of a platform that later shut down
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Richard A. Hein
Richard A. Hein@EntangleITcom·
Fun fact: I was the first Twetch user to trade a user #. Sold it for 100 BSV at $100/BSV ($10K). I was 33. Now that the new Twetch supports trading user accounts out of the box (my trade required custom handling by the Twetch team and they took a 20% fee for the work), it will be an interesting market.
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Rodsirloin
Rodsirloin@RodSirloin·
@RCEY28 I wouldn't call it art. Driving manual is really easy
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Ryan Cey
Ryan Cey@RCEY28·
This girl is cruising down the highway in her stick shift, windows down, wind in her hair, belting out songs while she shifts gears without missing a beat. She looks genuinely happy and in control. Most people these days never learn how to drive manual. It takes real timing and coordination to get the clutch and gas right, especially when you’re just trying to have fun and sing along. Seeing her do it so naturally makes you realize how much of that skill is disappearing. Do you think driving stick is becoming a lost art, or do you still think it’s worth teaching people even if almost every new car is automatic?
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