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He figured out that P=NP and the CIA had him whacked.


This is written by the C++ FQA guy which is an amusing and honest look at C++


LSD for creativity mixed amphetamine salts for productivity


I was just about to say the same :)


With what programming language does that even work?


All of them. Which can you read at the end? Maybe your Python. Definitely not my Common Lisp or C.


Writing new X11 screensavers. :P


Brainfuck


How is this any different than Wall Street's shenanigans? Serious question


Wall Street, however ridiculous it might be, jumps through the necessary legal loopholes that we, as a society, have deemed necessary to perform monetary transactions at scale.

Companies like MtGox and Liberty Reserve simply decided to skirt the envelope and paid the price. The answer is to register as a money transmitter; simple and plain. The difference is one conforms to the law and maximizes its potential whereas the other simply willfully ignores the law. The latter does not work whereas the former is tolerated as a matter of course.


When did we as a society decide that anonymous transactions ought to be illegal? Because I would like to voice my opinion in the other way.


"We as a society" didn't really do this. The banks, however, really like this, because it solidifies their economic position. Imagine how much more money they'd make if everyone is required by law to make all their transactions through them.

Who do you think is trying to convince people that this is the right way to do things? How long have we associated "anonymous transactions" with terrorism etc.?

Only recently, we've developed the idea that something must be wrong with you if you use cash. $100 doesn't even afford a meal for two at a nice restaurant and people look at you like you're a drug dealer if you carry a $100 bill.


> "We as a society" didn't really do this.

Yes we did, in reaction to the fear of organized crime, especially in urban areas. Anti-money laundering laws were the direct result of efforts to combat organized crime (the Bank Secrecy Act, the Organized Crime Control Act, and RICO were passed in the same year, 1970).

And you know what? It was extremely effective--so effective that we've got a generation of people who don't even remember what a huge problem it used to be.


> "We as a society" didn't really do this.

Yes, we most certainly did. Start with the Bank Secrecy Act which was enacted, by duly elected representatives of the People of the United States, in 1970. This group of regulations "require[s] financial institutions, which under the current definition include a broad array of entities, including banks, credit card companies, life insurers, money service businesses and broker-dealers in securities, to report certain transactions to the United States Treasury."


"Wall Street" is large enough that it effects the regulatory system that effects it. Think of big finance and government as a binary star system each orbiting and effecting the other. Tiny objects simply get sucked in by virtue of their puny size.

Above street level, all justice is politics.


Liberty Reserve didn't have the critical mass of pure cash to finance campaigns and install representatives that were dependent on their support. (Yes, I'm still upset that Occupy Wall Street didn't coalesce into an electoral reform movement.)


They are big enough to pay the money laundering tax.

http://www.salon.com/2012/12/11/hsbc_to_pay_1_9bn_to_settle_...


Very different. People "money laundering" using virtual currencies are just trying to make private transactions without reporting each one to the government.

Wall Street is getting massive funds directly or indirectly from the government/taxpayer.


transactions between private individuals vs public companies, banks and the goverment


The cynic in me would suggest that Wall Street pays its dues in donations.


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