You could either do some sort of crowdsourcing or just say “Look, there’s a finite number of hospitals in San Francisco and they all have a phone number. I’m going to call them all at 9 AM and publish which ones say ‘Yes we could give a walk-in 65 year old a shot.’”
You can wait until the city of San Francisco holds a hearing to determine whether the committee in charge of transparency has... or you could implement this by 10 AM PST tomorrow.
(And since incentives rule everything around me: if you do it, you will forever after be the VaccinateCalifornia team, and the industry will remember that fact.)
(Also saying a thing out loud which was not obvious to me at age 22: if you succeed in doing this, no amount of money you are likely to spend in doing so will be beyond the capability of interested tech people to reimburse.)
(Hmm since I wouldn’t have understood that at age 22, let me be more explicit:
“If you are worried about getting e.g. a $10k server bill, patio11 will make that bill go away, so don’t let that stop you from trying.”)
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Bitfinex/Tether, who are one operation, are by far the largest customer of Deltec, and when their chief counsel was asked whether they are investors in the bank, they demurred with respect to Tether's investments specifically.
Bitfinex/Tether's last banking relationship was with a firm called Noble Markets. Noble's board had compliance concerns and was worried their custodian would terminate services if thy banked Tether.
Bitfinex lead round; got banked; used Noble like skin suit. No longer exists.
This is a useful question, and the answer is that some people will *specialize* in being creators. They will be much, much, much better at it than the median creator. They will get most subscriptions.
Some people will *choose not to specialize* because e.g. better options.
Indeed, one of the risks for creator economy platforms is that you get "too good" at making creators successful, such that they can take the new indicia of market demand for their offering to places which have much more distribution muscle than you do.
That's not a new risk in publishing, incidentally; more traditional publishers have many, many decades of experience dealing with it. Some of their countermeasures are basically unconscionable and I'm glad the creator economy mostly doesn't go in for them.
A fun theory from someone who has experimented more with DeFi than me ("Not the sort of #$*(#% crazy I need in my life"): a "flight to quality" in stablecoins would cause multiple stablecoins to break pegs to the upside, resulting in loans of them being undercollateralized.
This would cause automatic, substantially instantaneous liquidation of the collateral for the loans.
"Can you diagram this out for me?"
Suppose I am hodling Bitcoin. I would like even more Bitcoin exposure. I use various DeFi protocols to pledge my Bitcoin in return for a loan of USDC, the Coinbase-backed stablecoin, at some interest rate. I use the USDC to buy more Bitcoin.
As you’d expect for a book designed to argue for a change in standard practices in the cooridors of power, much of it is aimed at decisionmakers for whom these sort of things are novel insights, rather than something they’ve read since middle school on BBSes.
It's interesting how often cryptocurrency community says "You know what is hard? Moving money between financial institutions." and says "Ah, potential solution: let's all use the same financial institution."
Which has a lot to recommend it! Other than the centralization thing.
This is part of the sales pitch for Silvergate Bank ("Need to square up with a contra based in the US? Can't wait for a blockchain? Use our API! 24/7 access and about as fast as SQL, with no worldwide TPS limit") and for Tether / Deltec Bank.
I'm not being unfair here; that's what Tether says in interviews.
The easiest way to get Tether redemptions, and the reason they're available on weekends, is if you're serious about using Tether you get an account at the one bank in the world that did not run screaming.
It's always a bit of whiplash from me when I code switch between the speed at which replies/decisions/etc happen from senior people in high-performance institutions and the speed at which acknowledgements happen from other institutions.
T+6 weeks: We have received your application. We will tell you whether it was well-formatted within 12-18 weeks, depending on our processing backlog.
versus:
T+2 minutes: "Yes lets do it. CC: Alice and Bob, you're DRIs for this, make it happen."
"Patrick why do you keep throwing the government under the bus."
Oh believe me there are some for-profit firms I can name where 6 weeks would be a land speed record for them responding to me, including ones where I should be an obviously incentive-compatible client.